New FLE program survey live

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


Come back to us when your 6 year old is 10 or 12 years old.

Oh never mind.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Nope - agree that talking about body differences and sex realistically normalizes being human for kids. Why the heck not?! (honest question)
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


Come back to us when your 6 year old is 10 or 12 years old.

Oh never mind.


Suspect (based on huge data set available to humans) that when 6YO learns the great "mysteries" of gender/sex s/he'll be uncomfortable in relation to how old s/he is when first learning about iit. Either "of course" or "WTH" are possible reactions based on how much families have been real or "shielded" kids from basic facts about being human.

Morals are not the same as sex and gender, people. It's 2022...can we really not understand that and convey to our kids??
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


DP. What a stupid post. The debate here is whether students should be taught FLE/sex ed in a coed classroom or whether they should be given separate, single-sex instruction. No one has suggested getting rid of FLE. Nice strawman.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


Come back to us when your 6 year old is 10 or 12 years old.

Oh never mind.


+1
So obtuse.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Nope - agree that talking about body differences and sex realistically normalizes being human for kids. Why the heck not?! (honest question)


AGAIN: that's not the debate. Of course we should be talking about body differences and sex realistically to our kids. However, there is zero reason boys and girls need to be together in class to learn these facts. Zero.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


Come back to us when your 6 year old is 10 or 12 years old.

Oh never mind.


Suspect (based on huge data set available to humans) that when 6YO learns the great "mysteries" of gender/sex s/he'll be uncomfortable in relation to how old s/he is when first learning about iit. Either "of course" or "WTH" are possible reactions based on how much families have been real or "shielded" kids from basic facts about being human.

Morals are not the same as sex and gender, people. It's 2022...can we really not understand that and convey to our kids??


DP. It'd be great if you'd actually read the whole thread before making useless and uninformed comments since you are making up arguments that no one is even making here. Thanks.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Your child is going to be the one that gets sent to the principal's office for googling "sex" in 6th grade while mine is going to be the one telling him "no, idiot, sex is not when a girl bleeds from her pee pee, it's called a vagina, by the way"


DP. What a stupid post. The debate here is whether students should be taught FLE/sex ed in a coed classroom or whether they should be given separate, single-sex instruction. No one has suggested getting rid of FLE. Nice strawman.


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You know, if you guys started talking to your children about their bodies, and GASP, SEX at an early age, you wouldn't be so freakishly worried about this stuff. Yes, OMG, my 6 year old knows what sex is and get this, she also knows the difference between her vulva and vagina.


Sorry but this is just weird and developmemtaply inappropriate.


Nope - agree that talking about body differences and sex realistically normalizes being human for kids. Why the heck not?! (honest question)


AGAIN: that's not the debate. Of course we should be talking about body differences and sex realistically to our kids. However, there is zero reason boys and girls need to be together in class to learn these facts. Zero.


+1,000!!!!
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