Parents are mad because of the movie that Florida teacher showed 4th grade students

A parent has spoken out after a Florida schoolteacher played the class horror film Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey.

On Monday, October 2, a fourth-grade class at the Academy of Innovative Education in Miami Springs received an unexpected arithmetic lesson.

Instead of prime numbers and multiples, the students, aged nine to ten, were given a biology lesson, learning about starving, what cherished childhood icon Eeyore looks like when he becomes supper, and how to ground someone in a wood chipper.

Thankfully, the kids didn’t get to the part where the wood chipper came into play—or when Piglet mauls a university student to death—but parents are upset because their little angel was subjected to an impressive ’20 to 30 minutes’ of the slasher before the teacher turned it off, according to parent Michelle Diaz.

The mother, who has twins in fourth grade, claims that the students chose the video, but she adds, “It’s not for them to decide what they want.” It is the professor’s responsibility to examine the material.”

The film is classified NR, which indicates it is not rated; nonetheless, read the summary and decide for yourself whether it sounds like an acceptable movie to show children.

According to IMDB, the plot goes something like this: “After Christopher Robin abandons them for college, Pooh and Piglet embark on a bloody rampage as they search for a new source of food.”

Diaz also alleges that students requested the teacher to ‘stop the movie,’ but he ‘didn’t’.

She makes a decision: “I feel like the school has completely abandoned me.”

Vera Hirsh, the school’s principal, said at UNILAD, “Last week, a video was accidentally shown by a teacher during indoor lunch.”

“Only the opening 20 minutes of the film were shown. A frightening scenario was exhibited over the first 20 minutes. The teacher then switched off the video.

“The problem was quickly addressed with the teacher, students, and parents involved.” Parents were reassured that the school followed all school district rules and procedures in response to the occurrence and that it will continue to support children’s safety and well-being on a daily basis.”