“Give me the boy until he is seven and I will show you the man.”
Attributed to Aristotle, the ancient Greek philosopher, this declaration has been echoed throughout history. Its premise — that early education is the key to adult character — is hard to dispute and helps explain the intensity of 2022’s school board elections on the Eastern Shore, as well as elsewhere in the country.
Because they’re eager to regulate what young people are exposed to in school, it’s no surprise that conservative groups have targeted school boards. Books, curricula, even teachers’ lifestyles have become burning issues for those uncomfortable with the direction of modern society. The furor over what newly elected Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy called “woke indoctrination” was evident in the platforms of school board candidates in last year’s elections, and here on the Shore several candidates used those issues to win seats on county boards.
Although school board elections are considered non-partisan, most candidates lean toward one or the other major party. In effect, candidates who want to control what’s taught in the classroom are usually Republicans, while those who prefer to leave decisions on curriculum and similar issues to educational professionals — superintendents, principals, teachers — are most often Democrats.
Despite passions aroused by these issues, the major concerns of local school boards are more mundane. Budget, infrastructure, and personnel take up most board energy, although board members inevitably spend part of their meetings fielding residents’ complaints on topics ranging from late-running school buses to “critical race theory.” “CRT” is a subject rarely taught below advanced college level.
Before the 2022 election, a survey by Capital News Service identified 41 school board candidates state-wide in Maryland running on socially conservative platforms; 20 of these candidates won board seats. The 41 included candidates in Wicomico, Worcester, Queen Anne’s, Talbot, and Cecil counties. Conservatives had their greatest success in Wicomico, where three of their candidates (including one incumbent) were elected.
However, the survey didn’t capture the whole story. For example, in an article after the election, a CNS map showed Kent as one of several counties where no conservative candidates ran, even though two of the candidates in Kent County were outspoken conservatives. Part of the reason for this discrepancy is that not all candidates responded to CNS’s survey, which asked, among other things, if they were concerned about how history is being taught in the schools, and if there are circumstances when certain books should be removed from the school library. On the Shore, 24 of the 53 candidates didn’t respond — and only in three counties did a majority of candidates respond. To be fair, some of those were unopposed and likely felt no need to fill out a survey.
It should be emphasized that the conservative effort to control school boards nation-wide is well-organized. An example is Moms for Liberty, a Florida-based lobby that states its mission is “to stand up for parental rights at all levels of government.” Among the issues it identifies on its website is a fight against requiring masks in public schools. The group has 250 chapters in 42 states, including in nine Maryland counties — Cecil, Kent, and Talbot among them.
In the 2022 elections, Moms for Liberty endorsed candidates not only in school board races, but for all levels of government. Of more than 500 school board endorsements, the group claimed a 50%-plus win rate and an 80% rate in its home state of Florida. In 17 districts, most of them in Florida and South Carolina, the group said it flipped local school boards to “parental rights supportive majorities.” Moms for Liberty plans to establish a chapter in every district in every county, and “to recruit moms to serve as watchdogs” in all 13,000 school districts.
The success of groups like Moms for Liberty and those who share its ideas is built, in part, on the fact that many residents, especially those without school age children, pay little attention to what’s happening in the schools. Can you name the principal of your local high school, for example? Have you ever talked to any of the teachers?
Students in our local schools today will become our fellow citizens and voters. Everyone concerned with the future of our society should pay attention to how well the schools prepare them to take on those roles. More of us need to attend school board meetings, to understand the issues, and to ensure that our voices — whatever policies we support — are represented.
Peter Heck is a Chestertown-based writer and editor, who spent 10 years at the Kent County News and three more with the Chestertown Spy. He is the author of 10 novels and co-author of four plays, a book reviewer for Asimov’s and Kirkus Reviews, and an incorrigible guitarist.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk