Anonymous wrote:Of course I agree with it. Their schools, their religion = their rules
Anonymous wrote:Wow! Catholic schools teaching and promoting Catholic doctrine! What a scandal!
Anonymous wrote:Many dioceses are establishing policies that require their educational institutions to uphold the Catholic teachings of biological sex. For example, in Green Bay schools are no longer allowed to use preferred pronouns, students must use the bathroom of their biological sex/play on sports teams of their biological sex/wear clothing that align with their biological sex. Do you agree with this?
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/251781/green-bay-diocese-issues-gender-identity-policy-consistent-with-biological-sex
Anonymous wrote:What many people don’t realize is that there are so many types of disorders of sex development. There is usually some underlying genetic reason someone does not identify as cisgender. It is cruel that the Catholic Church does not accept the medical truth.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5866176/#S1title
Anonymous wrote:They are Catholic schools. If you don't like the policies then that is clearly not the school for your family. Find a better fit.
Anonymous wrote:As a life-long Catholic who attended Catholic schools, if my child wished to use gender pronouns different from those assigned at birth then I'd pull them from the Catholic school. It isn't going to be a good fit for a lot of reasons. I have a favorable impression of Catholic schools based on my experience, but I recognize that it isn't for everyone. And schools vary. My Catholic university was very inclusive and liberal with school-sanctioned clubs for gay and transgendered students. K-12 was a different story and I just wouldn't put my kid through that. There are many, many types of schools out there and I am not going to use my kid as an experimental tool to force change.
Anonymous wrote: As a life-long Catholic who attended Catholic schools, if my child wished to use gender pronouns different from those assigned at birth then I'd pull them from the Catholic school. It isn't going to be a good fit for a lot of reasons. I have a favorable impression of Catholic schools based on my experience, but I recognize that it isn't for everyone. And schools vary. My Catholic university was very inclusive and liberal with school-sanctioned clubs for gay and transgendered students. K-12 was a different story and I just wouldn't put my kid through that. There are many, many types of schools out there and I am not going to use my kid as an experimental tool to force change.