DALLAS (AP) - Cindy Campos’ 5-year-old son was so excited about the Winnie the Pooh book he got at school that he asked her to read it with him as soon as he got home. But her heart sank when she realized it was a tutorial about what to do when "danger is near," advising kids to lock the doors, turn off the lights and quietly hide.
Texas parents fret over Winnie the Pooh being used to teach kids about school shootings
DALLAS (AP) - Cindy Campos’ 5-year-old son was so excited about the Winnie the Pooh book he got at school that he asked her to read it with him as soon as he got home. But her heart sank when she realized it was a tutorial about what to do when "danger is near," advising kids to lock the doors, turn off the lights and quietly hide.
As they read the "Stay Safe" book the school sent home without explanation or a warning to parents, she began crying, leaving her son confused.
"It's hard because you're reading them a bedtime story and basically now you have to explain in this cute way what the book is about, when it's not exactly cute," Campos said.
She said her first-grader, who goes to the same elementary school as her pre-K son, also got a copy of the book last week. After posting about it in an online neighborhood group, she found other concerned parents whose kids had also brought the book home.