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‘Hurtful': Dover, NH School Community Discusses Students' KKK Jingle

Chloe Harris says she recorded video of the Dover High School incident because she wasn’t sure anyone would believe what happened in class

Students, parents and teachers spoke Monday at a school board meeting after video showed high schoolers singing a racist jingle in Dover, New Hampshire.

A teacher was suspended after video began circulating online showing students singing a song set to "Jingle Bells" with lyrics including, "KKK, KKK, let's kill all the blacks."

The assignment, in an 11th grade U.S. history class at Dover High School, was to change the lyrics to a Christmas jingle to tell a story about Reconstruction, the period after the Civil War. Two students in the class chose the KKK as their topic, singing lyrics such as "White masks on our heads, blood beneath our feet, laughing till they're dead -- ha, ha, ha."

History teacher and baseball coach John Carver gave the assignment. He was suspended amid the investigation.

"Being here now, it's just kind of nervous. Always nervous coming to school and, like, seeing what could happen," Kyanna Marrow, a biriacial student at Dover High School. "It was kind of hurtful."

Opinions differed among those in the auditorium for Monday's school board meeting as to whether Carver should keep his job.

Chloe Harris, a student in the class, said she recorded the incident because she wasn't sure anyone would believe what happened.

"Thought if I don't record this, this is going to be the only evidence that I have that this happened," said the 16-year-old, who spoke to NBC10 Boston last week with permission from her mother.

Harris, who is biracial, says she was stunned by what the two boys came up with for their project.

As the students recited the song, classmates can be heard laughing in the background.

"When everyone was laughing I got really frustrated," said Harris. "I was like, 'Why are you guys laughing at this?' So I had to walk out of class. I'm disgusted by this."

School Superintendent William Harbron sent a letter to the school community on Monday saying they are working with students and teachers to investigate the incident. His message was also shared on the district's Facebook page.

The school district called the incident "harmful" and one of "extreme racial insensitivity."

"What we're trying to do is figure out what is in this video that's a viable lesson for our entire school community," Harbron told NBC10 Boston.

"We are deeply concerned that an event such as this could occur and understand the emotion and concern that this event will create for our students, families and staff," he said in his letter. "Administration from Dover High School and the District are working with students and the school community to respond immediately and effectively to this racial insensitivity."

Harbron's letter said families and school community members will be updated as they "create opportunities to come together and discuss, process, and plan as a community" to address both the immediate situation and long-term implications of racial insensitivity and bias.

Some commenters on the school district's Facebook page said the song was far worse than just "racial insensitivity."

"There was nothing 'implicit' about it," said one person. "This was an overt show of racism."

"I saw the video before it was taken down and why the teacher didn't stop it once they started singing it is beyond me," said another person.

Chloe and her family fault the teacher more than the students.

"I think it was not well thought out by the boys," said Chloe's mom, Robyn. "But I think they were doing the assignment given to them by their teacher."

The teacher has been suspended with pay while the entire incident is being investigated by the school district.

School officials will not say if the two students who sang the song will be disciplined.

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