The insurrection has particular resonance in Bucks County.
Pennsylvania has had the third-most accused insurrectionists arrested of any state in the country. And Bucks, an affluent, politically moderate county outside Philadelphia, was home to six of those people — more than any other county in the commonwealth.
The president of the Pennridge School Board, Joan Cullen, is a vocal Trump supporter who was in D.C. on Jan. 6. There is no evidence she did anything illegal while she was there, but her presence at the rally-turned-riot angered many in the district, and has contributed to lasting political unrest among parents, teachers, and the board.
The conflicts have since reached far beyond Jan. 6.
In a year that saw historically expensive and acrimonious school board elections across the commonwealth, Cullen spearheaded an effort to pause Pennridge’s Diversity, Equity, Inclusion initiatives. More recently, Pennridge also limited students’ access to library books that address gender identity.
Cullen didn’t respond to a request for comment. Bolton also did not respond to a question about whether the school board played any role in the district’s guidance to teachers about Jan. 6 instruction.
Some teachers believe the guidance stems from the politics of the board. Faculty who asked to go unnamed for fear of reprisal worry about the precedent the directive could set in regards to teaching history and current events.
The email to social studies teachers was the latest in a series of recent clashes about how Pennridge should present political topics to students.
In a Tuesday evening curriculum committee meeting, at which AP World History teacher Heidi Neuman proposed three textbooks for the upcoming school year, some board members expressed concern that the books were not focused enough on “western culture.”
Board members also heavily criticized the district’s elementary school history curriculum.
“There was not any focus on the greatness of America,” said board member Ricki Chaikin, who asked for a teaching of history that is more “moderate.”