Anonymous wrote:So in other words, people are taking umbrage at a proposal that the school board did not pass? I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Many people who are uncomfortable with gay or trans people mentally associate them with gay sex. What they mean is that they think that literally talking about the existence of gay or trans people is the same as talking about gay or trans people having sex. Those are the “age appropriate sexual concepts” they’re referring to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many people who are uncomfortable with gay or trans people mentally associate them with gay sex. What they mean is that they think that literally talking about the existence of gay or trans people is the same as talking about gay or trans people having sex. Those are the “age appropriate sexual concepts” they’re referring to.
I mean, it is.
Anonymous wrote:Many people who are uncomfortable with gay or trans people mentally associate them with gay sex. What they mean is that they think that literally talking about the existence of gay or trans people is the same as talking about gay or trans people having sex. Those are the “age appropriate sexual concepts” they’re referring to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sex ed curriculum changes over the past summer involving eliminating the concept of gender in the fle curriculum, and the push by the school board over the summer for eliminating sex segregated FLE classes starting in 5th/6th grade, in spite a huge number of students and parents (I believe close to 70-80% of *students*(!) responding to the survey that they were uncomfortable with combining boys and girls for FLE sex ed/puberty lessons.
Mixing genders is totally unnecessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sex ed curriculum changes over the past summer involving eliminating the concept of gender in the fle curriculum, and the push by the school board over the summer for eliminating sex segregated FLE classes starting in 5th/6th grade, in spite a huge number of students and parents (I believe close to 70-80% of *students*(!) responding to the survey that they were uncomfortable with combining boys and girls for FLE sex ed/puberty lessons.
Mixing genders is totally unnecessary.
Good thing for you that it didn't happen, then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sex ed curriculum changes over the past summer involving eliminating the concept of gender in the fle curriculum, and the push by the school board over the summer for eliminating sex segregated FLE classes starting in 5th/6th grade, in spite a huge number of students and parents (I believe close to 70-80% of *students*(!) responding to the survey that they were uncomfortable with combining boys and girls for FLE sex ed/puberty lessons.
Mixing genders is totally unnecessary.
Anonymous wrote:The sex ed curriculum changes over the past summer involving eliminating the concept of gender in the fle curriculum, and the push by the school board over the summer for eliminating sex segregated FLE classes starting in 5th/6th grade, in spite a huge number of students and parents (I believe close to 70-80% of *students*(!) responding to the survey that they were uncomfortable with combining boys and girls for FLE sex ed/puberty lessons.
Anonymous wrote:The sex ed curriculum changes over the past summer involving eliminating the concept of gender in the fle curriculum, and the push by the school board over the summer for eliminating sex segregated FLE classes starting in 5th/6th grade, in spite a huge number of students and parents (I believe close to 70-80% of *students*(!) responding to the survey that they were uncomfortable with combining boys and girls for FLE sex ed/puberty lessons.