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Daily Archives: March 4, 2025

Reents-Dickkut says student can “view” restricted books

On February 6, the Cameron, MO high school shared out a post on it’s Facebook Page highlighting a “book tasting” event held by ELA teacher Jennifer Reents-Dickkut for her sophomore level Language Arts class.  One local parent noticed that among the images posted by the Cameron school district were 3 titles that had been restricted by the school superintendent, Matt Robinson.  These books were restricted because of the adult content they contained and were not to be given to under age children without express permission from a parent through a form provided by the district.

Here is the original post on the Cameron R-1 High Schools Facebook page.  Three different “restricted” titles are visible in the included photos for this post

In a strange turn of events, we received an email that was forwarded by a parent who had a child in that class.  That parents child was given the restricted book The Hate U Give without the parents consent.   This parent emailed Mrs Dickkut to ask why their child was given a restricted book without consent.   The following screenshot was taken from the bizarre response which seems to suggest that superintendent Robinson’s restriction on books is only for reading, viewing them is acceptable.  See the blue highlighted portion in the image below.

Dickkut claims the book restrictions do not prevent children from “viewing” restricted books

“There is a policy to read books with permission, but nothing on the form about viewing them. ” – Jennifer Reents-Dickkut

Yes, Mrs Dickkut appears to defend her actions by suggesting that school restrictions that prohibit her from providing restricted books to children without parental written approval doesn’t apply to just “viewing”.

Considering the 2 year long fight in Cameron over all of these explicit books with adult content, it doesn’t seem reasonable that this was a mistake or a misunderstanding of policy.  Dickkut was at the same board meetings as me when the superintendent and board discussed these restricted books and how they were to be handled.  It was very clear.  Restricted books were to be segregated in a library closet and not to be given to students under the age of 18 without first getting parental approval on a book restriction form.  There was ZERO discussion about any differences between reading and viewing. 

In a story we shared yesterday, you can see Mrs. Dickkut admitted to this parent that she told the students in advance that there were restricted books being used in the book tasting.  This struck me as odd, because we were told by the Cameron school district and our board of education that access to restricted books would be controlled and only students with parental consent would be provided a restricted book.  This appears to be a deliberate act by an activist teacher to disobey her administrators and board of education.