Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I don't get this. I really don't. Your child is at a private school, right? Didn't you choose that school?
And don't private schools let parents pull their children out of sex ed classes? Public schools do.
No, not at our privates. We were not told when these discussions were to take place. There was no notice that the abortion discussion was coming in sixth grade. The school would definitely frown on any parent removing the kid from scheduled activities because they weren't p.c.
Consider transferring to public school, then?
Yes, we did leave and we did move on to public school. So did a number of other parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I don't get this. I really don't. Your child is at a private school, right? Didn't you choose that school?
And don't private schools let parents pull their children out of sex ed classes? Public schools do.
No, not at our privates. We were not told when these discussions were to take place. There was no notice that the abortion discussion was coming in sixth grade. The school would definitely frown on any parent removing the kid from scheduled activities because they weren't p.c.
Consider transferring to public school, then?
Anonymous wrote:
Read. Celebration by faculty of coming out stories. From Potomac's own website. http://www.potomacschool.org/voices/kristin/index.aspx
Parents are chosing to leave over this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I agree with this. Because of unchecked homophobic slurs during playground at my son's Catholic school I found myself explaining anal sex in third grade long before I had planned to even get to - uh - shall we call it "traditional" sex? Totally backwards.
OK, so you sent your child to a school where other children said nasty words on the playground, which means that you had to explain anal sex to your child before you were even ready to explain PIV sex, and that is the school's fault because -- well, why is it the school's fault?
Well if you had read you would have caught the word "unchecked". If the third grade boys are screaming "faggot" "gay" "queer" and "homo" at each other on the playground, then third grade boy comes home and asks what these words mean (not used in our home), I have to explain something, don't I? And, yes, I complained to the school. They did nothing: "Boys will be boys". I even pointed out this would be considered "hate language" on another campus so they were doing the boys a disservice by letting this language continue. The didn't care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I don't get this. I really don't. Your child is at a private school, right? Didn't you choose that school?
And don't private schools let parents pull their children out of sex ed classes? Public schools do.
No, not at our privates. We were not told when these discussions were to take place. There was no notice that the abortion discussion was coming in sixth grade. The school would definitely frown on any parent removing the kid from scheduled activities because they weren't p.c.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potomac school hands out awards and celebrates kids that "come out" at assemblies. The McLean School celebrates kids that come out and post their photos on the walls of the school. I can tell you from personal experience that it can be very confusing for a kid, especially one with ADHD or other SNs, and have too many messages assaulting their brain to also get this message as well and not know what to do with it.
I have had three "lifers" at Potomac. I have many friends who have worked at the school during our almost 20 years of involvement. My family celebrates any efforts the school makes to support ALL students and faculty, regardless of sexual orientation. I can tell you, however, that no "gay awards" have ever been handed out at an assembly. This post is ridiculous.
Read. Celebration by faculty of coming out stories. From Potomac's own website. http://www.potomacschool.org/voices/kristin/index.aspx
Parents are chosing to leave over this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potomac school hands out awards and celebrates kids that "come out" at assemblies. The McLean School celebrates kids that come out and post their photos on the walls of the school. I can tell you from personal experience that it can be very confusing for a kid, especially one with ADHD or other SNs, and have too many messages assaulting their brain to also get this message as well and not know what to do with it.
I have had three "lifers" at Potomac. I have many friends who have worked at the school during our almost 20 years of involvement. My family celebrates any efforts the school makes to support ALL students and faculty, regardless of sexual orientation. I can tell you, however, that no "gay awards" have ever been handed out at an assembly. This post is ridiculous.
And Cucinelli supports a woman getting permission to leave an abusive spouse and, by extension, going inside a woman's body wherehe should NEVER go.Anonymous wrote:Terry McAuliffe supports redefining marriage, and by extension, ramming the gay/tranny agenda down your fourth-grader's throat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I agree with this. Because of unchecked homophobic slurs during playground at my son's Catholic school I found myself explaining anal sex in third grade long before I had planned to even get to - uh - shall we call it "traditional" sex? Totally backwards.
OK, so you sent your child to a school where other children said nasty words on the playground, which means that you had to explain anal sex to your child before you were even ready to explain PIV sex, and that is the school's fault because -- well, why is it the school's fault?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents no longer have a say on what their children are taught nor when that information is introduced. But it is okay, because schools have selected materials that are factual both in content and in tone. If your kindergartner somehow misses school the day of the LGBT celebration, then that child will be well on the way to being viewed as ignorant and intolerant by all the other liberal parents. Tolerance is great as long as we all agree what we are supposed to be tolerant about ... there is no tolerance whatsoever for more traditional views or preserving the innocence of childhood for a few more years. I am a freak for not wishing my child to be introduced to the idea of anal sex (regardless of the genders involved) at the tender age of 9.
I don't get this. I really don't. Your child is at a private school, right? Didn't you choose that school?
And don't private schools let parents pull their children out of sex ed classes? Public schools do.
Anonymous wrote:Terry McAuliffe supports redefining marriage, and by extension, ramming the gay/tranny agenda down your fourth-grader's throat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. So a group of 4th grade boys have a teacher-led discussion about anal sex and your child happens to be out for a "doctor's appointment" that afternoon. When he returns to school, don't you think that the other 4th grade boys are going to clue him in on what he missed?!!! And this is not a private v. public school discussion ... not much difference.
When we selected our child's school, he was barely 4 years old ... we compared schools across many criteria, but the content of sex education classes honestly never crossed our minds. I'm not so worked up about it that I would change schools ... but I do think this DCUM discussion is a good introduction to parents just starting to consider schools as to what might be in their future.
But often you don't know what your private is going to do or when. Our liberal SN private (so very few options for selection) did not tell us that the health lesson on abortion was coming up. I had covered all other issues involving sex, reproduction, STDs, periods, everything you can think of during "Girl's Camp" while on vacation between 4th and 5th grade - and did it the way I wanted to do - from a Christian point of view (go ahead, flame away!). Fortunately, she had not been given wrong information as I had at the same age. I covered everything, thought I had done a great job, and really thought at the time I could put off abortion for the time being. Wrong. It was presented the way the school wanted to present it without any warning and my daughter came home horrified.