<p>SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Three Wisconsin middle school teachers have resigned after they put together a lesson for sixth-graders asking them how they would punish slaves.</p>
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<a href="https://madison.com/wsj/news/local/education/local_schools/3-teachers-resign-after-investigation-into-slavery-lesson-at-sun-prairie-middle-school/article_14a3409f-ce42-5f4d-b6e2-46475a3fa03b.html#tracking-source=home-trending">The Wisconsin State Journal reported</a> Wednesday that an investigation conducted by Axley Attorneys on behalf of the Sun Prairie Area School District found that the Patrick Marsh Middle School teachers collaborated on the assignment two or three years ago but the lesson was outside district curriculum and no one at any leadership level approved it.</p>
<p>The assignment asked students how to punish a defiant slave using Hammurabi’s code, a set of laws in ancient Mesopotamia. The investigation also found the assignment included other “offensive” questions.</p>
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<a href="https://apnews.com/article/madison-wisconsin-745c7c6e60ba1ac38651f08aa53adb36">The assignment came to light in February </a> when a parent complained. The parent asked for the lesson to be taken down due to its “inappropriate and sensitive nature," the investigation found, but the teacher refused. The parent called the principal, who told the teachers to remove the assignment. The teachers were placed on leave.</p>
<p>The teachers couldn’t remember how they developed the lesson but acknowledged it appeared to be identical to a $4 lesson from Teachers Pay Teachers, a website where educators can buy and sell materials, the investigation found.</p>
<p>The teachers acknowledged that “upon reflection” the questions were inappropriate but none of them could explain why they never considered how students and others might view the assignment. </p>
<p>The teachers were “permitted” to resign but will remain on paid leave through the end of the school year, the investigators’ report said. </p>
<p>District officials sent a message to staff and families Tuesday sharing the investigation’s findings. They said the assignment was “an egregious error that does not represent” the district’s commitment to racial equity."</p>