Anonymous wrote:It appears that there is an uptick in MS but then the talk may go by the wayside in HS. I have a 9th grader and it doesn't appear to be a "thing" anymore. The kids who were in the thick of switching in MS either switched back or stayed consistent and, either way, it's not a relevant topic of discussion for the kids. My 6th grader reports that it's a topic of discussion for a number of girls he knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disturbing to think of sixth graders thinking of their sexuality at all in any serious way. If they are I assume it is being pushed onto them by their attention seeking parents.
Is thinking about being a man or woman, to you, thinking about your sexuality? For me, thinking about being a woman and thinking about being straight are two different trains of thought.
Also, have you been in a middle school recently? Sixth graders are eleven and twelve. It's prime time for hormones galore. Sorry to break it to you but many are thinking about sex.
Anonymous wrote:It is a fad for some. For some it is a true identity and they keep with it. Those kids need a lot more support because they have a trans identity and it can be a hard journey.
I do think there is a bit of a shift away, like pronouns are seen as a bit drama. Kids will now use “they/them” as a way to describe a drama queen. As in, “Julie’s a they/them,” said with an eyeroll, to express that Julie is a handful or hard to get along with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disturbing to think of sixth graders thinking of their sexuality at all in any serious way. If they are I assume it is being pushed onto them by their attention seeking parents.
Sixth graders have always thought about their sexuality.
But gender identity is not the same thing as sexual identity.
Anonymous wrote:In 6th and 7th grade, it seemed like talk of pronouns and declarations of identity (trans, pan, bi, demi) were very common in my kid's circle. Now that 8th grade has begun, I'm not hearing it is much. In so much as this might be called a trend (and I realize for some kids it's not a trend), is this becoming less common among middle schoolers, or maybe just among older middle schoolers? Any middle school teachers care to weigh in?
Anonymous wrote:The ones who aren’t serious/are attention-seeking grow out of it by 8th and you are just left with the ones who truly feel this way. At one point in 6th, I think a quarter of the girls were claiming to be lesbian, trans, bi or non binary. Many of them were faking.
Anonymous wrote:Entirely anecdotal, but there also seems to have been a big surge of gender identity questioning a couple of years ago that has died down. That's when my then-elementary schooler's teachers were talking about it in class and a friend's sixth grader went to outdoor school with her grade and they had an entire cabin for gender neutral students.
This year my daughter went to sixth grade outdoor school and they had no student who identified as gender neutral, so just boys and girls cabins. And the former sixth grader who is now an eighth grader reports that most of her classmates are back to she/he identities.