Parents' Rights are Civil Rights
Notwithstanding the importance of the arts, the number one priority of any school system should be academic proficiency. Everything flows from that goal; problem-solving skills, critical thinking, the values of the merit system, the benefits of hard work, the negative consequences of not meeting deadlines, the importance of following rules, and self-discipline. That is no longer the case. Today our schools are struggling to get half of the students proficient in core academics. The number one priority for schools, through the advent of the official policy of “whole child development,” has become the overwhelming emphasis on social and emotional learning, the quest for equity over equality, and a de-emphasis on individual achievement, which has resulted in the values once taught by the family having become the providence of the schools and social activists. Instead of schools reinforcing the values families instill in their children, schools have assumed the lead role in that part of a child’s development, often in conflict with the family and, in some cases, by design, with policies that restrict that information from being given to parents.
In the current FCPS policy for creating a welcoming environment for transgender and “gender non-conforming,” student’s parents are not notified if their child chooses a gender and/or name different from their biological sex or identifies as transgender unless the child gives the school permission to do so. This puts the child in charge of self-diagnosing a psychological condition (gender dysphoria) or their transgender status and puts the school in the position of offering a recognized form of therapy (known as Affirmative Therapy) without the knowledge of the parents. Opponents of parental notification, including most of the current school board, argue that this is a safety issue necessary to protect children. They argue that parents may not accept their children’s choices and possibly abuse them or toss them out of their homes. There is no doubt that this could occur (see statistics below for Frederick County student homelessness), but it is very rare.
The second highest priority of a school system is the safety of the students.
So why assume that all parents are potentially guilty of forcing their children out of the house or abusing a child instead of giving parents the benefit of the doubt? If it comes down to safety (which board Vice president Dean Rose stated is one of two obligations FCPS has), how is allowing a minor child to choose a gender and make a potentially life-changing decision without the involvement of their families and/or healthcare providers, safe for children? Those that came to our April 5 forum heard evidence of how damaging not notifying parents can be and how schools that are practicing affirmative therapy (something they are medically unqualified to do) are creating situations that put many children at risk both now and in the future by declining to allow families to offer care. Gender dysphoria is a recognized psychological condition, and most people who experience it have at least one other underlying psychological condition. It is not something a school should allow a minor child, still restricted by law from making many independent decisions, to choose to do without the full participation of their families and the medical providers who are in the best position to establish the proper support and care with the full array of information for the “whole child.”
That is why transparency in the education system is so critical. Right now, those in opposition to parental notification are actively engaged in a letter campaign to the BOE asking them to dismiss our policy proposal. Contact the BOE and Superintendent Dyson via email or phone and let them know you support parental notification. Staying silent ensures parents will be excluded.
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Homeless Student Statistics in Frederick County
In 2022, FCPS reported, in an article in the Frederick News Post, that the county’s total number of homeless, unaccompanied students was 125. There was no information about why these students were homeless, nor could we find any credible data to support how many were gender non-conforming or transgender. We contacted FCPS several times over the last weeks in an effort to get this information but have not yet received a response.
Let’s put this in context. In 2018 the number of homeless students in Frederick County was 162; in 2019, the number dropped to 107. There was no data available for 2020, which we assume was due to the pandemic. While even one homeless student is a tragedy, these numbers represent .025%-to .03% of the 45,000 students in the county, and these homeless numbers are the total number, not one that should be used as an indication that transgender or gender non-conforming students are at such a substantial risk that all parents in the county should not be notified. As a matter of fact, if student safety and long-term health is the goal, then excluding parents, not including them, should be the concern.
Some related articles provide examples of how school systems are taking the control away from parents and how parents are pushing back
The Muslim community is speaking out against MCPS’s changing opt-out policy.
Last week we reported that the Montgomery County School System took away a parent’s right to opt out of the classroom reading of transgender and gender expression materials in elementary school. Parents are pushing back. Read here.
Connecticut school nurse suspended after blowing the whistle on school officials hiding transgender information from parents
School nurse Kathleen Cataford made a comment to warn a mother about schools pushing transgender ideology on students and mentioned an 11-year-old student is taking puberty blockers. The school’s Superintendent, Dr. Leslie Torres-Rodriguez issued a statement condemning her comments and announced that the nurse would be suspended pending an investigation. Read here.
California School District was sued by a mother whose 11-year-old transitioned without her knowledge.
A mother is suing a California school district, accusing a guidance counselor of helping her 11-year-old biological daughter transition to a male without the family’s knowledge. Despite the suit, the school district voted to retain the policy against parental notification. It says that school staff should not reveal a transgender student’s gender identity to their parents without the child’s permission. Paula Hare, who said she is a transgender Korean War veteran, said she is an advocate for LGBT rights but thinks the current policy goes too far. “Parents bring their children to school to learn, not for a teacher to play doctor,” Hare told the school board. “For the teacher to come in between the child and the parent, that’s a bad thing, because then you don’t have the parent-child relationship anymore. What you have is a teacher tearing a family apart.” Read here.