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Topic: RSS FeedSex ed, up to date
National Review, May 25, 1992 by John P. Hale
THE FIRST DAY in the first grade is always a milestone for parent and child. It is the start of an adventure which parents welcome with mixed emotions, knowing babyhood has ended and real student days have begun, with work to be done, tests to be taken, and skills to be acquired to help the child grow into a self-sufficient adult. While parents of a first-grader almost always leave their child at the schoolhouse door with a twinge of regret, that regret would be converted to horror for New York City parents if they realized what new lessons await their child.
"If teachers do not discuss lesbian/ gay issues, they are not likely to come up," says the new teachers' manual Children of the Rainbow First Grade, on page 372. No parent would argue with that, since five- and six-year-olds are not known for any level of interest in such topics. What would startle the parents is that that statement is the jumping-off point for instructions to the teacher on how to introduce the subject.
"... at least 10 per cent of each class will grow up to be homosexual," continues the manual, and "It is also common for them to be thrown out of their homes once their parents find out their child is gay." "Classes," the teachers are advised, "should include references to lesbian/gay people in all curricular areas and should avoid exclusionary practices by presuming a person's sexual orientation."
The manual continues: "Challenging sexual myths can begin on the first day of school." And if the boys tend to play with trucks and the girls with dolls and the children do not themselves suggest switching after a couple of sessions, teacher should suggest that the switch take place.
Do It
WHAT'S going on? The New York City school system has made reshaping children's attitudes and behavior its number-one goal. But the reshaping is not toward self-restraint and discipline, but rather toward all forms of hedonism, hetero- as well as homosexual. And the process involves driving a wedge between children and their parents, both by telling the children not to accept their parents' values, and by not telling the parents what the schools are doing.
One factor is the enlarged role that homosexuals are playing in molding New York City school policy. When the Federal Government made a grant to New York's schools to support education in drug prevention, $500,000 of that money was awarded to the Gay and Lesbian Community Center to run Youth Enrichment Services ! The volunteers who will staff condom distribution rooms in city high schools and who will be available to counsel the children on sexuality include delegates from the Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC) and the Hetrick Martin Institute for Gay and Lesbian Youth, both of which have been designated as official resources of the New York City school system.
GMHC has a new illustrated color brochure that outlines safe-sex practices and advises, "If you have sex with women these guidelines still apply." One of the guidelines is to wear a latex surgical glove when you insert your fist into your partners rectum. The pamphlet has circulated unofficially in at least one city high school. So far the Board of Education has been silent as to whether it will make surgical gloves available to the children as a health measure.
The Hetrick Martin Institute has published its own sex-ed curriculum, which states the course has been given in area high schools. One portion of the curriculum is a detailed instruction on anal intercourse with the admonition, "Do it. Have fun!"
Of even greater significance to parents are three excerpts from the January 2992 training manual. Some background is in order. When the New York State Board of Regents issued guidelines on the new AIDS curriculum to be adopted by all local school districts, it recognized that parents had the ultimate right to determine what type of instruction their children should receive. The Regents mandated that parents be given the right to opt their children out of a portion of the course. New York City schools raised the question whether parents should be told that they could opt out. Here is the answer given in the manual.
Question. How are children withdrawn from prevention lessons of the AIDS instruction program? Answer. According to New York State Regulations, parents and/or guardians have the right to withdraw their children from the prevention lessons of the AIDS instruction program. The school is not under an affirmative obligation to inform parents of this right .... ' [Emphasis added.]
Put bluntly, you don't have to tell them. That will certainly eliminate the inconvenience of parents opting out.
Look at a second question and answer in the same manual:
Question. If a parent has told me explicitly that he/she does not want his/her child to have a condom, am I still permitted to give that child a condom if he/she requests it?
Answer. Yes ....
That's consistent, if you have reached the conclusion that parental rights have flickered out in the arena of sexuality training. Whether the schools have the right to ignore the parents' explicit instruction is currently being challenged in a suit pending in the Supreme Court of Richmond County (Staten Island).
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