Note to readers: This story has been changed to clarify that the petition doesn’t ask for Gentile-Montgomery to be terminated. Instead, it asks for immediate action toward the lesson plan and teaching style
Roughly 60 people, including parents, teachers, and students, spoke during the Sequoia Union High School District Board of Trustees meeting on Wednesday night, Jan. 17, many in support of an ethnic studies teacher who is accused of teaching a one-sided, biased and anti-semitic lesson plan about the ongoing Israel-Hamas war to her students in early November.
Chloe Gentile-Montgomery taught a controversial lesson at Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton on Nov. 3. Around half of the people who spoke during the public comment portion of the Wednesday meeting supported Gentile-Montgomery, who teaches both ethnic studies and U.S. history at M-A.
Her lesson plan on the Israel-Hamas conflict has led to a petition calling for the school district to "ensure students are not subjected to discrimination and indoctrination from an educator who seems intent on spreading her biases to students from her position of power as their teacher," according to the petition.
The petition accuses Gentile-Montgomery of being biased by teaching a lesson plan propagated by anti-Semitism. But tensions rose during Wednesday’s meeting from the personal harassment Gentile-Montgomery received fueling a divided response from the community.
On Thursday, Gentile-Montgomery, told this news organization that she was sorry if the lesson offended anybody but believed it had been taken out of context.
'Counter narratives'
"The main intention of the lesson was to address the questions my students were asking and teach them how to look at the news in general. There are several different perspectives and narratives, and we need to look at multiple sources to understand what is happening," Gentile-Montgomery said. "In the lesson, I wasn't asking (the students) to conclude the conflict; we were just looking at the news, which was the main idea, and we were identifying dominant and counter narratives."
The lesson plan appeared in a petition calling for the termination of Gentile-Montgomery, which received more than 500 signatures in support, according to Tabia Lee, director of the Coalition for Empowered for Education. The organization directs its donations to the Jewish Institute for Liberal Values, a nonprofit organization. The petition explains how the lesson plan is biased.
While Lee doesn't have a child in Gentile-Montgomery's classroom, she is concerned the lesson was inaccurate, outside the realm of the California Education Code's curriculum and had an anti-Semitic bias. Her goal is to inform and educate the public, Lee said.
Images of a puppet on strings and a map of Palestine's territory shrinking over the decades were pictured on the lesson plan and noted as offensive by multiple community members like Noah Glaser, who said the lesson appeared one-sided and inaccurate.
"The imagery of the Jewish puppet master controlling the world was just one of the images that was unironically displayed in this one-sided lesson that essentially reduced millions of people," Glaser said.
While Gentile-Montgomery said she apologizes for the image of the "puppet master" on the lesson's slide, she said it was a lesson created by another teacher who taught a more extended version.
"I didn't look at it close enough and see how that would relate, but in no way was I trying to say Israelis control the media or anything like that," Gentile-Montgomery said. "It was more an image of people in power, but I feel bad for that and could see how that can be misconstrued."
She added that she doesn't need to turn in a weekly lesson plan to be reviewed, and she is free to teach the curriculum as she feels fits best.
'Publicly attacked'
During the Wednesday meeting, multiple people mentioned that other teachers weren't scrutinized to the same degree as Gentile-Montgomery, attributing her treatment as unfair because she is Black.
Gentile-Montgomery echoed those comments, adding that she is the only Black credentialed teacher at the school.
Instead, students like Ebony Freeman said she is disappointed in the school's administration for not sticking up for Gentile-Montgomery when they have stuck up for other teachers accused of worse behavior.
"I am standing on behalf of my teacher, who I have watched be bullied, cyberattacked, stalked and overall not defended by almost everyone in the community and it makes me sick," Freeman said. "If you feel offended by the slides, that is your right, and I will not stop you from expressing yourself. However, there is a line that all of you have crossed, and that can not be defended."
In November, Gentile-Montgomery said she was harassed incessantly via e-mail, her school mailbox and was surprised by "disturbing images" that were posted outside her classroom.
Colleague Melissa Díaz, who teaches ethnic studies at Sequoia High School and also helps develop the ethnic studies curriculum for the district, said she wrote a letter to support Gentile-Montgomery. The letter received more than 300 signatures, 140 of which come from staff and alums of the district, Díaz said.
"We ask the board to make a public statement that condemns the harassment of teachers and develop a protocol to support when teachers are being publicly attacked," Díaz said. "The message, absent a statement from the board of administration, is that teachers shouldn't teach lessons on Israel or Palestine out of fear of retribution from community members with political agendas. This sets a dangerous precedent for our ability to engage students and current events and threatens our ability to prepare students to participate in a democracy."
When asked to comment on the circumstances surrounding the controversy, Arthur Wilkie, SUSHD public information officer, did not address the question. Instead, he said the district is dedicated to educating the nearly 9,000 students it serves in the community.
Gentile-Montgomery took a leave of absence from teaching on Nov. 20 for mental health reasons. She said she plans to return to work when she feels safe.
"I just miss my kids," Gentile-Montgomery said.
The Oct. 7 Hamas attack killed around 1,200 people and captured about 250 hostages, most of whom were civilians, according to the Associated Press.
The AP reported on Jan. 15 that 100 days into the war, Palestinian officials said the death toll in the area has surpassed 24,000.
Comments
Registered user
Menlo Park: Central Menlo Park
on Jan 19, 2024 at 2:13 pm
Registered user
on Jan 19, 2024 at 2:13 pm
Gentile-Montgomery said "that she is the only Black credentialed teacher at the school."
If this is true there is something biased with M-A's teacher hiring.
Would like to see statistics for Black teachers at M-A and Ravenswood HS since 1950. Ravenswood up until it's closure.
Registered user
Atherton: other
on Jan 19, 2024 at 3:11 pm
Registered user
on Jan 19, 2024 at 3:11 pm
Depicting Israelis as "puppet masters" is taking a side as this is a pejorative depiction. Teachers should not be taking a side. Teaching the history of a conflict, and potential reasons each side feels they are right, is fair game. Teachers need to be developing students' abilities to make up their own minds when presented with two conflicting arguments. At least this is what a good teacher should do.
After engaging in this poor judgment, the teacher pulling the racial victim card herself as the "only black teacher" seems ironic.
Registered user
Menlo Park: Central Menlo Park
on Jan 19, 2024 at 3:18 pm
Registered user
on Jan 19, 2024 at 3:18 pm
This is not about Ms. Montgomery, it’s about the specific curriculum taught in her class (and perhaps in the wider district). That said, harassment of her or anyone else should not be condoned. This is precisely why we owe it to our students to teach them with a factual, balanced curriculum. Sequoia Union High School District should be in support of speech and actions that provide an atmosphere of mutual respect, free from any form of prejudice and intolerance.
The student in the article spoke about bullying and lines being crossed. Then she held up a sign directed at attendees behind her to deliberately incite and provoke families already in pain.
Registered user
Menlo Park: The Willows
on Jan 19, 2024 at 5:14 pm
Registered user
on Jan 19, 2024 at 5:14 pm
What has our polarized, tribal world come to these days? Was the teacher "taking sides" or instead presenting different sides on the understanding of the Israel-Hamas War? If so, that's exactly what a teacher is supposed to do, i.e., present alternative views of a controversial issue, not propagandize for a single position. Her use of the puppet image may have been offensive, but the point of view she was presenting, though not her point of view, might consider the puppet an appropriate image...for that point of view. Prepares students for the road, not prepare the road for the students.
Registered user
Menlo Park: The Willows
on Jan 19, 2024 at 9:45 pm
Registered user
on Jan 19, 2024 at 9:45 pm
It would be helpful to include images from the slideshow in question, so that readers can evaluate the lesson plan for themselves.
The lesson includes a stereotypical cartoon of a Hasidic Jew to represent all Israelis, in addition to the puppet imagery described in the article. It erases Jewish indigenuity in the region, minimizes the Holocaust, includes false maps of Israel and Palestine, calls the State of Israel “illegal,” and makes no reference to Hamas’s stated mission of eliminating Jews.
The lesson requires students to echo the author’s opinions. It implies that President Biden’s statements about the conflict are questionable because he is a “person with power and/or privilege.” It clearly violates district policy and state education codes that were put in place to protect students from discrimination and political propaganda.
Many of us who spoke at the board meeting made it clear that we condemn the harassment of all teachers, at all times and in all forms.
We do expect administrators to hold teachers accountable to district standards; to alert families that their children were exposed to inaccurate and harmful content; to correct all falsehoods taught in the affected classes; and to create guidelines to prevent political propaganda from making its way into classrooms.
Finally, it is clear that biased and politically charged content in Bay Area schools has created an environment that is isolating, hostile, and painful for Jewish students. With antisemitic incidents at an all-time high in California and across the country, it is time for us to evaluate what is causing so much hatred, and how we can work together as a community to prevent it.
Registered user
another community
on Jan 20, 2024 at 9:30 am
Registered user
on Jan 20, 2024 at 9:30 am
The teacher absolutely should not have been harassed. That is shameful, and I hope she soon will feel comfortable enough to return to M-A. No one should be traumatized in such a manner.
That said, I found parts of the lesson (including the puppet master slide) extremely offensive, reviving ugly stereotypes that one would have hoped had disappeared. The parents were entirely right to protest.