USA TODAY US Edition

Slavery-simulation game causes stir

- Maria Polletta and Ricardo Cano

Use of an online game that simulates slavery has shocked and upset some Phoenix Elementary School District parents who say the tool trivialize­s a complex and potentiall­y traumatic issue.

Mission US: Flight to Freedom has students adopt the persona of 14-year-old Lucy King, an enslaved girl trying to escape a Kentucky plantation. Following a choose-your-owna-dventure format, students navigate the plantation master’s demands and plot a river escape, sometimes receiving beatings.

“I found out about it last week, when my son told me what happens in the game,” said De’Lon Brooks, whose seventh-grader attends Emerson Elementary, a K-8 school. “I was just like, ‘No. Not at all. That’s not going to work.’

“As a parent and as someone who grew up under civil-rights (movement) members, I couldn’t allow my son to be subjected to that without my permission,” Brooks said.

Phoenix Elementary district spokeswoma­n Sara Bresnahan said the district was unsure how the Flight to Freedom sim- ulation made its way into the classroom and blocked access to Mission US on Tuesday.

She said the district’s “pacing guide,” an online repository of instructio­nal tools made available to teachers, did not include that mission. The guide did include the City of Immigrants mission, which involves a 14year-old Jewish girl immigratin­g to New York from Russia in 1907.

Bresnahan said she agreed with parents’ concerns and was taking the issue “to district administra­tion to be reviewed quickly.”

It was not immediatel­y clear how many students had played Flight to Freedom. Bresnahan said the district knew of only one seventh-grade classroom that had used the simulation and was checking whether other teachers in the district’s 13 elementary schools had used it as well.

The Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng and the National Endowment for the Humanities provided funding for the developmen­t of Mission US, which earned nearly 20 awards and honors after its 2010 launch. The creators also provided supplement­ary materials for teachers who use the game in class.

 ?? SNOW CASTLE ?? In Mission US: Flight to Freedom, players adopt the persona of a slave trying to escape a Kentucky plantation.
SNOW CASTLE In Mission US: Flight to Freedom, players adopt the persona of a slave trying to escape a Kentucky plantation.

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