Teacher claims he was fired for reading n-word section of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ in ‘teachable moment’

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A teacher in Washington state said he was recently fired for reading his class a passage from “To Kill a Mockingbird” without censoring the n-word.

Matthew Mastronardi, a Spanish teacher at West Valley High School in Spokane, was filmed reading out loud a section of the 1960 Harper Lee novel about racism and injustice in the Jim Crow-era Deep South.

The Spanish teacher said in a lengthy X post Wednesday that he only spoke the slur — which is used repeatedly in the classic work — as a “teachable moment about context and literary honesty in reading” when he heard students saying they felt they “must ‘skip over the n-word.’”

“I was astonished and expressed disagreement, saying, ‘That’s silly; it undermines the book’s historical context and disrespects the author’s intent to use accurate language’,” Mastronardi said.

“A girl asked me in front of the class, ‘Would you read the word?’ I replied, ‘Yes, I would read every word.’”

Unaware that he was being recorded, Mastronardi — who admitted being “nervous but committed” — said he then chose to read out the passage in front of the 30 students as a “teachable moment.”

Within days, the teacher said he was slapped with a verbal warning from the principal before later being told he could either resign or face not having his contract renewed.

After refusing to quit, Mastronardi was served a non-renewal notice, he said.

The school repeatedly stated the decision wasn’t solely down to the book saga — but officials apparently refused to provide other reasons, he claimed.

“There are no parent complaints, no documented disciplinary actions and I’ve passed every teaching evaluation,” he said.

Mastronardi said he now has one last chance to appeal at a school board meeting on June 25.

The iconic novel about racism and injustice in the Jim Crow-era Deep South tells the story of a black man falsely accused of raping a white woman.

The acclaimed novel, which is told through the eyes of a young white girl, uses the n-word dozens of times.

The Post reached out to West Valley High School about Mastronardi’s firing but didn’t hear back immediately.

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