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South Carolina School Offers Extra Reading Help, Just Not to White Students


After spending months of late nights helping her son, as he struggled to learn to read, one South Carolina mom was thrilled to discover that her child’s school had a special program to help students who were falling behind.

But after inquiring about the program, she was shocked to learn that he wouldn’t qualify for the tutoring, she said. The reason: He’s white.

The book club, designed to provide extra help in reading at St. James Elementary School (SJES) in Myrtle Beach, welcomes black children only, documents provided to The Epoch Times confirmed. Based on the documents, it wasn’t clear if the program, started in 2021, has run continuously since then.

Either way, “how does that make sense?” asked Laura, who asked to not be fully identified in order to protect her son.

Epoch Times Photo
Protesters gather in Columbus Circle during a march against racism and inequality in the theater industry in New York City on April 22, 2021. (Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

“We are supposed to be equal and have the same opportunities,” Laura said in exasperation, while speaking to an Epoch Times reporter. “It just seems very unfair.”

Officials at the Myrtle Beach, South Carolina school and the communications team of Horry County Schools did not respond to requests for comment from The Epoch Times.

Racially-Segregated Reading Help

Laura’s son likes to help others, meet new people, and play with Pokémon and superhero toys, she said. But school is difficult, because he struggles to read, likely because of his attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

She got little help from the school as she watched her son fall behind, she said. Finally, a doctor diagnosed the reason for his struggle.

She questions why the school didn’t recognize the problem, “even though they have the resources to diagnose him,” she said.

Laura bought a special learning program for them to tackle together during the summer, trying to “teach him at home what they should be teaching him at school,” she said.

“He never was pulled out to get extra attention for reading, even when he was struggling,” she said.

Black Lives Matter protesters
Black Lives Matter protesters march, in Louisville. Ky., on Sept. 25, 2020. (Darron Cummings/AP Photo)

There were others who didn’t qualify for the school’s reading help because they didn’t fit the right racial profile.

In 2021, there were 21 students in 3rd grade and 19 in 4th grade who were behind in reading, according to state statistics about the school.

Yet only 17 students—all of them African American—were allowed to participate in the reading club, according to documents obtained through a public records request by the local Moms for Liberty chairman.

Exclusion in the Name of Equity

According to documents obtained by David Warner, of Moms for Liberty,  the 2020-2021 school year was “the only year that a book club was specifically designed to address the African American subgroup.”

The club was part of SJES’s new initiatives to boost diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), the documents say.

Exclusion in the name of equity infuriates Moms for Liberty members.

“We don’t stand for that,” Warner told The Epoch Times. “We want it to be all students that get help, not just African American students.”

The book club program did seem successful. Eleven of the 17 students allowed to participate boosted their proficiency, school documents show.

Epoch Times Photo
David Warner, of Moms for Liberty in Horry County, S.C. (Courtesy of David Warner)

Warner said he first learned of the book club’s existence after hearing SJES had received a national award.

“Gender, race, and ability levels are used to create balanced classrooms with equitable opportunities to grow and learn, to promote cultural awareness, and to foster appreciation for diversity among students and staff,” the school’s application for the award read.

The application also praised its “change project” to increase African American reading scores.

School principal Felisa McDavid conducted an “equity audit” from 2020 to 2021, records showed.

The Epoch Times contacted McDavid, but received no response.

After the COVID-19 pandemic, SJES committed on its website “to keep educational equity front and center by providing assistance, resources, and partnerships.”

The commitment to equity included response teams to work with “family needs,” attempts to “address discrimination, biases, and student conduct,” increasing “awareness of the diversity among families,” support for “social-emotional needs,” and other initiatives.

Fighting the ‘Whiteness of Curriculum’

The audit discovered that SJES’s student body was 90 percent white, 4 percent black, 5 percent Hispanic, and 2 percent Asian, documents show. The teaching staff was 98 percent white.

After the audit, McDavid set out to make changes. Gym classes began to include African dance, and a multicultural mural was painted on the walls, McDavid said in YouTube videos. And the reading club for African American students only was put into place.

“What they did was segregation,” Warner said. “They literally segregated children for a reading program.”

Training for teachers at the school took an equity focus, as well.

Teachers attended Equity in Education conferences, put on by the Center for the Education and Equity of African American Students at the University of South Carolina, the Blue Ribbon Award application notes.

Epoch Times Photo
About 100 students at the University of Florida gather at the Marston Science Library on the campus in Gainesville, Fla., on Feb. 23, 2023 as part of a planned “walkout” to protest state lawmakers’ efforts to curb diversity, equity and Inclusion (DEI) programs in public universities and colleges around the state. (Nanette Holt/The Epoch Times)

Facilitating the training was University of South Carolina professor Gloria Boutte. Boutte describes schools as places of “physical, symbolic, linguistic, curricular/instructional, and systemic suffering” for African American children, in her book “We Be Lovin’ Black Children: Learning to be Literate About the African Diaspora.”

In the book, she describes the “Whiteness of curriculum” as “violence,” and says that, in school, African American children undergo “spirit murders.”

Race-Based Hiring

McDavid committed to hiring teachers at the school based on race.

“My targeted equity commitment is to recruiting and retaining a diverse teaching force in my school,” she said in a video posted to YouTube.

In the video, McDavid cites studies that say minority students learn better and obey better when taught by teachers of the same race. Having the “rich experience and expertise” of African American teachers would benefit all students, she says in the video.

In a video, McDavid notes that 59 percent of African American students failed state expectations for learning English.

In another YouTube video, McDavid shares that her school’s teachers reported that African American students weren’t getting enough educational support from parents. She blames the feedback on “a bias” and vowed to eliminate the complaint.

“We are working to dispel that bias through more culturally responsive unit planning and professional development,” she said.

When questioned, the school said the book club was just a club. Documents provided to The Epoch Times describe the program as an “intervention.”

“Intervention should never be based off of a child’s race, but their educational need,” Warner said.

When he asked how the reading program worked, the school stopped giving him details, he said. It was unclear whether the students met with teachers after school or were pulled from class during the school day.

“They’re not willing to talk about what happened,” Warner said.

Epoch Times Photo
Demonstrators rally against critical race theory (CRT) being taught in Loudoun County schools at the Loudoun County Government center in Leesburg, Virginia on June 12, 2021.  (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images)

Knowing the school has provided racially segregated programs that exclude her son has prompted Laura to plan for private school next year. It destroyed her trust, she said.

“I just don’t feel like they have my son’s best interests at heart,” she said.

An estimated 1.4 million students left public schools for private schools, charter schools, or to be homeschooled during the COVID-19 pandemic.



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