Anonymous wrote:I don't think the pp is a bigot. Sorry I am also uncomfortable with these kinds of topics. I really hate how the "gay" lifestyle is forced on people. I am not interested in a school teaching about sex education at such a young age..and you are when you are really pushing things like "coming out"--what does that mean..What does two moms mean--I say this as someone who is for gay marriage. I think the reality is that this kind of lifestyle is not the average everyday one and it's something I would like to explain as it inevitably deals with issues of sex..that's my job and how I handle the discussion..my business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
I'm curious. Why do you think it's inappropriate for 3rd graders to learn about acceptance of gays and lesbians? My 6-year-old has known for a couple years about the two-mommy and two-daddy parents in our neighborhood, and she's no worse the wear for it. I assume most kids in this area have encountered such families. It seems to me a pretty positive message for a school to be saying to kids that age that it's OK if some boys like boys. What's the problem with it?
I assume they're not putting on demonstrations with bananas and condoms and toasters ....
Anonymous wrote:Not necessarily -- the description certainly matches GDS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
You know that you are a bigot, right? You don't want your 3rd grader to "encounter such things"? Seriously? Were you born in 1927? Loving families in the DC area come in all kinds of combinations, including two mothers and two fathers. There is absolutely nothing inappropriate about teaching kids to accept people for who they are, and to make sure they understand that not all families look like theirs. My kids have understood their whole lives that some people fall in love with the opposite gender and some with the same, and that although one is much more common than the other, both are a-ok.
Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
Anonymous wrote:We like it OK - -one of the big three -- and our DC seems to like it, though he's very easy going. One thing that bothers us, which we'd never see at DC public (and I doubt we'd see at a school with some religious affiliation), is the overt and trying-too-hard gay-friendliness -- e.g., the recent giant posters announcing "National Coming Out Week" along with books about gay teenagers in the library. The designated gay-friendly "safe-places." The assemblies with facilitators "having a conversation with the students" about diversity and acceptance of gay/lesbians. It's just so inappropriate, in my opinion, to have such things in the presence of young children. I'm not homophobic - -I just don't want my 3rd grader to encounter such things yet, but the school forces it on them -- on all kids.
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone I assure you. However, people are so in love with the concept of private school they don't want to admit that it isn't always grand.