Policy forbids R-rated films in schools
- Share via
Michael Miller
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District has adopted a policy
forbidding the screening of R-rated movies in classrooms, following
controversy over a violent film shown in a seventh-grade history
class last week.
Jaime Castellanos, the assistant superintendent of secondary
education for the district, said that on Monday, the district agreed
to ban all R-rated films from classrooms and to allow PG and PG-13
movies only with prior approval from the site principals. Numerous
parents complained after Corona del Mar High teacher Dan Granite
screened the R-rated film “The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc”
last Wednesday.
The new regulation, which applies to all grade levels from 7 to
12, is in effect through June. Castellanos said that after the school
year is over, administrators will look into a more lasting change.
“We don’t have anything in policy that prevents R-rated movies,
and [the new rule] will buy me some time between now and the end of
the semester,” Castellanos said. “The Messenger,” released in 1999,
contains a rape scene and a number of intense battles. Some parents,
speaking in Granite’s defense, said that he fast-forwarded through
the offending scenes in later class periods on Wednesday. Granite did
not return calls seeking comment.
The temporary ban on R-rated films marks the first time the
Newport-Mesa district has had an official policy governing the
showing of videos. Dan Diehl, the principal of TeWinkle Middle
School, said that previously, his only requirement for teachers was
that their classroom films be tied into the state standards for
curriculum.
“I think we have to consider that when the kids are here at
school, we are in place of the parents,” Diehl commented.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.