Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach 8th grade and the kids ask it as casually as “are you in honors English?” or “Are your parents divorced?” It would depend on the tone/context I guess, but I absolutely wouldn’t ask a teacher or the kid’s parent. If a kid came to me with this concern, I’d ask why the question upset them (assuming it did), and work through it from that angle.
So you would assume a kid upset by this question has a problem? Great. FYI the last thing most middle schoolers want to be thought of is gay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach 8th grade and the kids ask it as casually as “are you in honors English?” or “Are your parents divorced?” It would depend on the tone/context I guess, but I absolutely wouldn’t ask a teacher or the kid’s parent. If a kid came to me with this concern, I’d ask why the question upset them (assuming it did), and work through it from that angle.
So you would assume a kid upset by this question has a problem? Great. FYI the last thing most middle schoolers want to be thought of is gay.
Anonymous wrote:I teach 8th grade and the kids ask it as casually as “are you in honors English?” or “Are your parents divorced?” It would depend on the tone/context I guess, but I absolutely wouldn’t ask a teacher or the kid’s parent. If a kid came to me with this concern, I’d ask why the question upset them (assuming it did), and work through it from that angle.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a strange and strong reaction to this question. Who knows why the friend was asking. Maybe they have a mutual friend who is interested and the friend was feeling out the situation.
honestly, your tween may be trying to tell you something. Agree that the kids in school know it is acceptable to be gay. Your tween might just be feeling you out for your response to being gay.Anonymous wrote:My tween said one of her friends asked her if she was gay the other day. My DD didn't know what to say beyond "no" and "why are you asking?" Seems like an odd question for a kid to ask and DD felt really awkward and uncomfortable. I told her that her response was appropriate and asked if friend was asking others ... she did not know. The question really made my kid feel uncomfortable and I suggested she may want to talk to a teacher about it to put her at ease. Should I say something to the parent or just leave it alone?
Anonymous wrote:My tween said one of her friends asked her if she was gay the other day. My DD didn't know what to say beyond "no" and "why are you asking?" Seems like an odd question for a kid to ask and DD felt really awkward and uncomfortable. I told her that her response was appropriate and asked if friend was asking others ... she did not know. The question really made my kid feel uncomfortable and I suggested she may want to talk to a teacher about it to put her at ease. Should I say something to the parent or just leave it alone?