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Should public schools ban Halloween parties?

Results so far:

No
80% 657 votes Total: 819 votes
Yes
20% 162 votes

by Sita

Anytime anything is the least bit controversial, someone comes up with the idea to ban it. Instead of banning Halloween parties in schools, why don't schools do what they are supposed to do, and educate children?

Even if you yourself do not believe in a holiday, there is no shame in learning about the culture or peoples that do. For Halloween, there is enough rich history there to turn what may have just been a party, and what might have become just another school day, into a rich lesson-plan full of beliefs and cultural celebrations throughout time. Children of different backgrounds can explain what they do for holidays, or what they don't do, and why. Thus children can learn not only from lesson plans, but from eachother.

It shouldn't be limited to Halloween, either. Christmas, Easter, every holiday can be treated the same. But the basis for this argument comes not only from a learning standpoint, but also from the belief that children need to have a little fun. Everything children ever enjoyed about school is slowly being taken away- recess, because either there's not enough time, or the area is unsafe for children to be outside in, art and music are gone first anytime a school has to reduce its budget, and now holidays are suffering. If a parent or student is insistent about not participating in a celebration, they can be given another assignment and taken to another room- which is exactly what they did when I was in school. It would be explained to us that they had left because their faith or culture did not believe or otherwise didn't celebrate the holiday, and our activities would otherwise go on as normal. Not once do I recall anything ever being said or done to these children that was inappropriate afterwards, except that children are naturally curious and might ask a few questions about it afterwards.

Learning about other cultures and faiths facilitates understanding, not the other way around. Halloween, as with many holidays in the United States, has become more of a commercial holiday than anything else, and that is the real sadness of the situation. Yet, instead of using the opportunity to explain the relevance and background to the celebrations, many would rather just ban them altogether. Banning holiday parties and celebrations takes away from the learning experience and helps to facilitate ignorance.

Halloween has ties to ancient calendars, Dia De Los Muertos, All Saints Day, and the natural changes of the season. As the world grew chilly and trees


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Should public schools ban Halloween parties?

No
  • 1 of 42

    by Len Morse

    While public schools should respect all religious beliefs, banning Halloween parties is not necessary. Any non-lesson classroom

    read more

  • 2 of 42

    by Sita

    Anytime anything is the least bit controversial, someone comes up with the idea to ban it. Instead of banning Halloween parties

    read more

Yes
  • 1 of 9

    by Sylvie Leochko

    I am currently teaching in an elementary school. Through the eighteen years that I have been teaching, Halloween has always

    read more

  • 2 of 9

    by Sara A Broers

    I do believe that public schools should no longer host Halloween parties, contrary to the majority of most people writing

    read more

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