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When kids all across the country return to school Tuesday, some
will see a welcoming message from President Barack Obama and some
won’t.

Obama’s planned address to students has touched off yet another
confrontation with Republican critics, who have battered the White
House over health care and now accuse the president of foisting a
political agenda on children.

The president will speak directly to students Tuesday about the
need to work hard and stay in school. His address will be shown
live on the White House Web site and on C-SPAN at noon EDT, a time
when classrooms across the country will be able to tune in.

Schools don’t have to show it. But districts across the country
have been inundated with phone calls from parents and are
struggling to address the controversy that broke out after
Education Secretary Arne Duncan sent a letter to principals urging
schools to tune in.

Districts in states including Texas, Illinois, Minnesota,
Missouri, Virginia and Wisconsin have decided not to show the
speech to students. Others are still thinking it over or are
letting parents have their kids opt out.

Some conservatives, driven by radio pundits and bloggers, are
urging schools and parents to boycott the address. They say Obama
is using the opportunity to promote a political agenda and is
overstepping the boundaries of federal involvement in schools.

“As far as I am concerned, this is not civics education _ it
gives the appearance of creating a cult of personality,” said
Oklahoma Republican state Sen. Steve Russell. “This is something
you’d expect to see in North Korea or in Saddam Hussein’s
Iraq.”

Arizona state schools superintendent Tom Horne, a Republican,
said lesson plans for teachers created by Obama’s Education
Department “call for a worshipful rather than critical
approach.”

The White House plans to release the speech online Monday so
parents can read it. The president will deliver the speech at
Wakefield High School in Arlington, Va.

“I think it’s really unfortunate that politics has been brought
into this,” White House deputy policy director Heather Higginbottom
said in an interview with The Associated Press.

“It’s simply a plea to students to really take their learning
seriously. Find out what they’re good at. Set goals. And take the
school year seriously.”

She noted that President George H.W. Bush made a similar address
to schools in 1991. Like Obama, Bush drew criticism, with Democrats
accusing the Republican president of making the event into a
campaign commercial.

Critics are particularly upset about lesson plans the
administration created to accompany the speech. The lesson plans,
available online, originally recommended having students “write
letters to themselves about what they can do to help the
president.”

The White House revised the plans Wednesday to say students
could “write letters to themselves about how they can achieve their
short-term and long-term education goals.”

“That was inartfully worded, and we corrected it,” Higginbottom
said.

In the Dallas suburb of Plano, Texas, the 54,000-student school
district is not showing the 15- to 20-minute address but will make
the video available later.

PTA council president Cara Mendelsohn said Obama is “cutting out
the parent” by speaking to kids during school hours.

“Why can’t a parent be watching this with their kid in the
evening?” Mendelsohn said. “Because that’s what makes a powerful
statement, when a parent is sitting there saying, ‘This is what I
dream for you. This is what I want you to achieve.’”

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, said in an interview with
the AP that he’s “certainly not going to advise anybody not to send
their kids to school that day.”

“Hearing the president speak is always a memorable moment,” he
said.

But he also said he understood where the criticism was coming
from.

“Nobody seems to know what he’s going to be talking about,”
Perry said. “Why didn’t he spend more time talking to the local
districts and superintendents, at least give them a heads-up about
it?”

Several other Texas districts have decided not to show the
speech, although the district in Houston is leaving the decision up
to individual school principals. In suburban Houston, the
Cypress-Fairbanks district planned to show the address and has had
its social studies teachers assemble a curriculum and activities
for students.

In Wisconsin, the Green Bay school district decided not to show
the speech live and to let teachers decide individually whether to
show it later.

Florida GOP chairman Jim Greer said in a statement he was
“absolutely appalled that taxpayer dollars are being used to spread
President Obama’s socialist ideology.” Despite his rhetoric, two of
the larger Florida districts, Miami-Dade and Hillsborough, plan to
have classes watch the speech. Students whose parents object will
not have to watch.

The Minnesota Association of School Administrators is
recommending against disrupting the first day of school to show the
speech, but Minnesota’s biggest teachers’ union is urging schools
to show it.

Quincy, Ill., schools decided Thursday not to show the speech.
Superintendent Lonny Lemon said phone calls “hit like a load of
bricks” on Wednesday.

One Idaho school superintendent, Murray Dalgleish of Council,
urged people not to rush to judgment.

“Is the president dictating to these kids? I don’t think so,”
Dalgleish said. “He’s trying to get out the same message we’re
trying to get out, which is, `You are in charge of your
education.’”

___

Libby Quaid reported from Washington. Associated Press writers
April Castro, Monica Rhor, Zinie Chen Sampson, Christine Armario,
Jessie Bonner, Scott Bauer, Tim Talley, Martiga Lohn, Tammy Webber
and Alan Zagier contributed to this report.

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