Oklahoma
Oklahoma Teacher Quits After Giving Students QR Code For Banned Books
An Oklahoma English instructor says she has resigned after being reprimanded by her highschool for offering college students with a QR code to entry banned books, following the adoption of state laws that censors faculty studying materials.
Summer season Boismier instructed HuffPost that she resigned efficient instantly Wednesday from Norman Excessive Faculty, situated south of Oklahoma Metropolis, and “would do what I did once more… in a heartbeat” due to restrictions that had been positioned on school rooms by Home Invoice 1775.
“[The Norman Public Schools district] primarily requested me to decide to conserving politics out of my classroom in the event that they had been to reinstate me,” she stated in a web based message. “It’s my firmly held perception that training is inherently political; due to this fact, being apolitical is each an impossibility and (in of itself) a political stance.”
Boismier, in an earlier assertion to Fox 25, blamed Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Republican state management for creating “an unattainable working setting for academics and a devastating studying setting for college students.”
“For the second 12 months in a row, college students at Norman Excessive might be with no licensed English instructor for a considerable period of time,” she instructed the native outlet.
HB 1775, which Stitt signed into regulation in Could 2021, limits how faculties are capable of focus on race and gender in school rooms. Critics say the laws goals to ban conversations about essential race concept, which examines the systemic nature of racism in society.
Boismier confirmed to HuffPost that she had supplied college students with a QR code linking to a Brooklyn Public Library web site that gives teenagers free entry to banned books.
She stated a father or mother had complained to the district about her doubtlessly violating HB 1775 on the primary day of courses Friday.
Every week earlier than courses began, she tweeted photos of what she stated had been her classroom’s bookshelves lined with crimson paper displaying the message “Books the state doesn’t need you to learn.”
Within the tweet, Boismier stated her college students may now not entry texts by individuals of colour or LGBTQ authors “as a result of state management has spent the final 12 months loudly labeling these books and their tales/views as pornography, as indoctrination.”
A consultant for Norman Public Colleges confirmed to HuffPost that district officers reached out to the instructor — whom he didn’t establish by identify — after a father or mother expressed concern concerning the educator’s habits and its relation to HB 1775.
The instructor, “throughout class time, made private, political statements and used their classroom to make a political show expressing these opinions,” stated Wes Moody, the manager director of communications at Norman Public Colleges, in a press release Tuesday.
“Like many educators, the instructor has issues relating to censorship and e book removing by the Oklahoma state legislature. Nonetheless, as educators it’s our objective to show college students to suppose critically, to not inform them what to suppose,” he stated.
The instructor was anticipated to return to class Wednesday and at no level was the particular person terminated, suspended or positioned on administrative depart, Moody added. He later confirmed the instructor’s resignation.
Boismier she stated she’s obtained “a groundswell of assist” from faculty colleagues throughout the state and outdoors teams, together with the Brooklyn Public Library, amid the information about her.
“All issues thought of, I’m doing okay. Though, I suppose I’ll have to revive my LinkedIn account,” she stated.
The American Civil Liberties Union’s Oklahoma affiliate, which has advocated towards HB 1775, criticized the legislation Tuesday, tweeting that it “will proceed to impression the integrity of Oklahoma’s training system for years to return.”
“The First Modification protects the fitting to share concepts, together with the fitting of scholars to obtain data that builds data,” the group wrote.
“Colleges function an important house to discover and encounter new views free from politically motivated censorship, and but we proceed to see e book bans that successfully erase the historical past and lived experiences of ladies, individuals of colour, and 2SLGBTQ+ individuals,” it added, referring to LGBTQ and different sexual and gender identities.
Late final month, Oklahoma’s State Board of Schooling disciplined two faculty districts for violating HB 1775. The board voted to decrease the accreditation standing of Tulsa Public Colleges and Mustang Public Colleges as punishment, Fox 25 reported.
Oklahoma
Navy Midshipmen Seek Victory Over Oklahoma in Armed Forces Bowl
Navy won its rivalry game with Army West Point, but there’s one more game left on the schedule and one more shot at some history for the Midshipmen.
Navy is preparing to face Oklahoma in the Armed Forces Bowl on Friday, their first appearance in a bowl game under second-year head coach Brian Newberry. Kickoff is set for noon eastern.
If the Midshipmen (9-3) are able to beat the Sooners (6-6), it would mark the sixth time in school history that they won at least 10 games in a season, joining the teams from 1905 (10-1-1), 2004 (10-2), 2009 (10-4), 2015 (11-2) and 2019 (11-2).
Navy needs to put its blowout win over Army out of its minds. The Sooners, while not the OU that most are used to, will still be a formidable opponent. But there will be change under center after the transfer of quarterback Jackson Arnold.
No such issues with Navy quarterback Blake Horvath, as he looks to cap off the season with an incredible performance in the postseason.
Here is a preview of the game.
Armed Forces Bowl
Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, Texas
Time: noon, ET, Friday
TV: ESPN
Radio: WBAL 1090 AM / 101.5 FM (flagship), Navy Football Radio Network.
Coaches: Navy: Brian Newberry (14-10 at Navy, overall); Oklahoma: Brent Venables (22-16 at Oklahoma, overall).
Fun fact: Newberry played high school football at WestMoore High School in Oklahoma City, about an hour and a half away from Oklahoma’s campus in Norman.
All-Times Series: Navy leads series, 1-0.
Last meeting: Navy 10, Oklahoma 0 (1965 in Norman, Okla.).
Series notes: This is Navy’s first bowl game against OU, but not its first bowl game against an SEC school. The Midshipmen played Ole Miss in the 1955 Sugar Bowl. Navy has played Missouri and Texas, but neither was in the SEC at the time.
Last Week: Navy def. Army, 31-13 (Dec. 14); Oklahoma lost to LSU, 37-13 (Nov. 30).
About Navy: Navy’s win over Army allowed the Midshipmen to claim the Commander in Chief’s trophy and you can’t doubt the accomplishment. Navy won the two service academy games by a combined 45 points. That’s just domination.
Last week, Midshipmen defensive back Rayuan Lane III accepted an invitation to the Senior Bowl, just the fifth Navy player to accomplish that feat. He’ll play in this game and then take his shot at getting drafted into the NFL.
Along with chasing 10 wins, Horvath is chasing the single-season touchdown pass record at Navy. He’s tied it with 13, putting him in the company of Ricky Dobbs. He tossed two touchdowns against Army.
About Oklahoma: Even though OU only finished .500, this game marks a rare chance for Navy to measure itself against one of the game’s historic programs.
Oklahoma is the sixth-winningest program in FBS history with 950 wins and is playing in a bowl game for the 26th straight season, with a record of 31-25-1. OU’s 58 bowl appearances are the fourth-most in FBS.
The first year in the SEC was a gauntlet for the Sooners, who faced eight ranked opponents during the season. But, their win over No. 7 Alabama probably robbed the Crimson Tide of a chance to play in the College Football Playoff.
Next Up: The season concludes for both teams.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Ford Sports Blitz: December 22
Join News 9 Sports Director Dean Blevins, News On 6 Sports Director John Holcomb, and Toby Rowland for this week’s edition of the Oklahoma Ford Sports Blitz.
Sunday, December 22nd 2024, 11:25 pm
By:
News On 6,
News 9
OKLAHOMA CITY –
This week on the Oklahoma Ford Sports Blitz, Dean Blevins, John Holcomb, and Toby Rowland begin the show with their opening takes.
Toby’s Top 3 OU, OSU, TU Recap
Viewer Question
Thunder Update: Caruso 4-Year Contract Extension, No Christmas Game
OU, OSU, TU, ORU Basketball Recap
OSU Wrestling Beats Virginia Tech Play The Percentages
Oklahoma
Oklahoma transfer LB Dasan McCullough commits to Nebraska
Oklahoma transfer LB Dasan McCullough commits to Nebraska
Oklahoma transfer linebacker Dasan McCullough has committed to Nebraska, he confirmed on Instagram Sunday afternoon.
The 6-foot-5, 235-pound McCullough spent the past two seasons in Norman with the Sooners. He began his college football career in 2022 at Indiana, where he earned Freshman All-American status.
McCullough will come to Nebraska with one season of eligibility remaining.
McCullough, who played Oklahoma’s versatile hybrid linebacker/safety position called the Cheetah, suffered an injury before the start of Oklahoma’s fall camp this season and missed the first five games. He returned to the field in October and played in the final seven games, the last five of which he started. He recorded 17 tackles and 2.5 tackles for loss in 2024.
In 2023 at Oklahoma, McCullough played in 10 games and started seven while making 30 tackles with 3.5 TFLs and three pass deflections.
McCullough, who was a star recruit and ranked No. 61 nationally in the 2022 class, comes from a football family. His dad, Deland McCullough, played running back in the NFL and is currently Notre Dame’s associate head coach and running backs coach.
While Deland spent three seasons as the Kansas City Chiefs’ running backs coach from 2018-20, Dasan played his high school ball at Blue Valley North High School in Overland Park, Kansas. Deland became Indiana’s associate head coach and running backs coach in 2021, and Dasan, then an Ohio State verbal commit, flipped to Indiana not long after.
Dasan followed his father to Bloomington and made an impact right away. He played in all 12 games with four starts and racked up 51 tackles, 6.5 TFLs, four sacks and four pass deflections. He gained Freshman All-American honors and a Big Ten honorable mention selection.
— Steve Marik, Inside Nebraska staff writer,
Analysis
McCullough is a versatile backend defender that can play a variety of roles in Nebraska’s defense.
A rare blend of size and athleticism at 6-5, McCullough shows good speed and change-of-direction ability for his size. Has high-end instincts and IQ, which shows up in zone coverage and reacting against the run. Has had some intriguing flashes as a pass-rusher, but largely relies on athleticism to get into the backfield, still developing consistent pass rush moves.
Technically sound tackler, though lean he’s got wiry body strength. Consistent aggression could improve as could hip fluidity. Athletic enough to hold his own in man coverage, technique can continue to improve, better in zone at this point in his career.
In Nebraska’s scheme, McCullough can play all three linebacker positions, rover or even safety if needed. He’s likely best at inside linebacker with a few pass-rush opportunities.
This addition provides Nebraska defensive coordinator John Butler something of a chess piece to move around his defense.
— Tim Verghese, Inside Nebraska recruiting analyst
Additional analysis
McCullough is a versatile and sizable defender who played both a traditional linebacker position and Oklahoma’s “cheetah” spot, which is roughly equivalent to the nickel. He also saw some periodic snaps as an edge rusher for the Sooners during his two years in Norman.
McCullough at his best against the run, as he takes good pursuit angles, fills gaps responsibly and is a reliable tackler. That said, he’s intelligent and instinctive in zone coverage and can generally be trusted to hold his own in man-to-man matchups against tight ends and running backs.
McCullough ought to be quite the chess piece in John Butler’s defense, and could truly thrive in Lincoln depending on the Huskers’ specific vision for his diverse skill set.
— OUInsider writer Parker Thune
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