Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. DC doesn’t have a phone, and doesn’t have signs of puberty yet. I’m not sure whether to put off taking FLE to 8th grade. All the course contents seem to be very helpful, and I’d hate to opt out and miss those. I just don’t know if a child should learn about sexual intercourse even before puberty.
If you opt out this year, they’re not going to teach him this year’s content next year. He will simply miss it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. DC doesn’t have a phone, and doesn’t have signs of puberty yet. I’m not sure whether to put off taking FLE to 8th grade. All the course contents seem to be very helpful, and I’d hate to opt out and miss those. I just don’t know if a child should learn about sexual intercourse even before puberty.
If you opt out this year, they’re not going to teach him this year’s content next year. He will simply miss it.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. DC doesn’t have a phone, and doesn’t have signs of puberty yet. I’m not sure whether to put off taking FLE to 8th grade. All the course contents seem to be very helpful, and I’d hate to opt out and miss those. I just don’t know if a child should learn about sexual intercourse even before puberty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am really glad to see gender separate!!!
You are a precious thing. My 7th grader (back a few years) had an older kid describe the size of his dick to her during the first week of MS. You are in for a long few years.
Ok. What does that have to do with what I posted? I’m still glad they will instruct the kids in gender separate groups and not mixed genders.
It has to do with the fact that once they are not separated they are still going to get an instruction in FLE, just not the way you think. Focusing too much on the separation, and being grateful for it, is a false sense of comfort. That's all.
Also your comment presupposes that they was at some point going to be mixed classes. That was never the case and never has been.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. DC doesn’t have a phone, and doesn’t have signs of puberty yet. I’m not sure whether to put off taking FLE to 8th grade. All the course contents seem to be very helpful, and I’d hate to opt out and miss those. I just don’t know if a child should learn about sexual intercourse even before puberty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am really glad to see gender separate!!!
Ok. What does that have to do with what I posted? I’m still glad they will instruct the kids in gender separate groups and not mixed genders.
It has to do with the fact that once they are not separated they are still going to get an instruction in FLE, just not the way you think. Focusing too much on the separation, and being grateful for it, is a false sense of comfort. That's all.
Also your comment presupposes that they was at some point going to be mixed classes. That was never the case and never has been.
This is not correct ALL FLE classes from 4th grade up were planned to be co-ed starting this year. But the school board delayed that in order to make sure families were fully aware of the forthcoming change.
And OP, please give your child some factual instruction about their own body before they are “ready” for sex. When you think they are “ready”, it may be too late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am really glad to see gender separate!!!
You are a precious thing. My 7th grader (back a few years) had an older kid describe the size of his dick to her during the first week of MS. You are in for a long few years.
Ok. What does that have to do with what I posted? I’m still glad they will instruct the kids in gender separate groups and not mixed genders.