Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Oh my! That's a very rude question".
Welcome to the 21st century. No longer rude.
LGBTQ+ is much more accepted now than it used to be and the goal is to remove any stigma with being in any of those demographics. So, stop considering it rude and just answer. If the kid asked your son and he denied and then the kid asked you, I would say "He said he wasn't. Why would you not believe him?"
It’s not an appropriate question for an eight year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Oh my! That's a very rude question".
Welcome to the 21st century. No longer rude.
LGBTQ+ is much more accepted now than it used to be and the goal is to remove any stigma with being in any of those demographics. So, stop considering it rude and just answer. If the kid asked your son and he denied and then the kid asked you, I would say "He said he wasn't. Why would you not believe him?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing to be done about it. Your kid is going to have to learn to navigate this.
By 5th grade everyone will lay claim to their gender and sexual identity. Buckle up.
Anonymous wrote:Hello how you handle? My son said no but I still think it’s inappropriate to ever ask someone, much less kids in 3rd grade about their sexuality or identity. Talk to the teacher? Other parent? Do nothing?
My son knows what it means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big topic of conversation in 4th grade here
The answers are yes, no or I’m not sure yet.
Why is this hard?
The perception of the number of gay people in the US has recently risen from 10% to 15%. The actual number is 1-2%. Our perception is totally off - and our children's perception is even more off.
Your facts are way off, the number of people that identify as lgbt is over 7% and that doesn’t include the generation being discussed here. Gen Z has a 20% lgbt identification rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big topic of conversation in 4th grade here
The answers are yes, no or I’m not sure yet.
Why is this hard?
The perception of the number of gay people in the US has recently risen from 10% to 15%. The actual number is 1-2%. Our perception is totally off - and our children's perception is even more off.
Anonymous wrote:
Teach the kid that gay means joyful. Mess with his little mind.
Anonymous wrote:Big topic of conversation in 4th grade here
The answers are yes, no or I’m not sure yet.
Why is this hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing to be done about it. Your kid is going to have to learn to navigate this.
By 5th grade everyone will lay claim to their gender and sexual identity. Buckle up.
We are not seeing this in my kid’s sixth grade class. I’m sure some kids talk about it, but it really isn’t the “thing” that news and social media says it is. Her class has about 350 kids.