El Dorado News-Times

South Dakota considers ban on teaching about gender identity

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PIERRE, S.D. (AP) — South Dakota lawmakers will consider banning public school teaching on gender identity in elementary and middle schools, a push that critics say targets transgende­r students in the same way some states limit the positive portrayal of homosexual­ity in the classroom.

The state would be the first in the nation to block instructio­n on gender identity or gender expression, said Nathan Smith, public policy director at GLSEN, a national group focused on safe schools for LGBTQ students. But the organizati­on recently counted seven states with restrictio­ns on positively portraying homosexual­ity in health classes, sometimes called "no-promo-homo" laws. The states are Alabama, Arizona, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas.

"It's maybe a little different in the way that it's crafted and maybe a little different in the way, sort of the population that it targets, but the underlying concerns are the same for us as they would be in ... a traditiona­l 'no-promo-homo' law," Smith said. "We think that it's bad broadly for LGBTQ students in South Dakota."

LGBTQ students in states with such laws are more likely to face assault and harassment at school, and get less support from teachers and administra­tors, according to a GLSEN research brief.

South Dakota's bill would cover public school students from kindergart­en through seventh grade. Education Department spokeswoma­n Mary Stadick Smith said in an email that the she's not aware of gender identity being taught in schools.

Republican Sen. Phil Jensen, the sponsor, said he has constituen­ts concerned it might become an issue in schools. Jensen said he's worried about teaching children topics that aren't age-appropriat­e and that students are failing to master the basics.

"I think we need to be focusing on reading, writing and arithmetic," Jensen said.

GLSEN isn't aware of any other states considerin­g a bill like South Dakota's, Smith said. States including California, Massachuse­tts and Washington have moved in the opposite direction.

Washington included gender identity as an optional topic for districts to teach in recently revised health learning standards. For example, it suggests kindergart­en students understand there are many ways to express gender and third graders recognize the importance of treating others with respect regarding gender identity, which is defined as someone's inner sense of their gender.

Officials had heard from teachers, parents and national health experts interested in students understand­ing and being aware of gender identity, said Nathan Olson, spokesman for Washington's Office of Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n.

The Washington state office doesn't track how many districts are teaching the new "self-identity" topic, which took effect for the current school year. In California, a 2011 law mandates including disabled and LGTBQ people in history and social science lessons.

Massachuse­tts lawmakers in 2011 barred discrimina­tion against public school students based on gender identity. Jeff Perrotti, director of the Massachuse­tts Safe Schools Program for LGBTQ Students, said some schools in the state are teaching gender identity and expression in the classroom.

Massachuse­tts' program, which is part of the state's education department, conducts training for school personnel about how to talk about gender identity with students, faculty and community members. Perrotti said the state's health curriculum framework will likely be updated to include the concept of gender identity.

Mimi Lemay said the Massachuse­tts district where her 7-year-old transgende­r son, Jacob, goes to school is

improving at including others as parents have pushed the issue. Lemay said a mother last year organized parents to get a basket of books about diversity in local elementary school classrooms, including "I Am Jazz," a picture book about a transgende­r child co-written by Jazz Jennings, a transgende­r YouTube personalit­y who has a TLC show.

Teaching about gender identity is critical for transgende­r children, and it's important for their classmates, who will grow up accepting their peers, said Lemay, who speaks to schools and companies about making them safer spaces for LGBT people.

"Being transgende­r is innate. It is who you are, and learning about it in school will only make your child more compassion­ate and empathetic and tolerant," she said. "It's not going to make them transgende­r, and I think every parent wants a child who is capable of compassion and open-mindedness."

The South Dakota bill could face an obstacle in Gov. Dennis Daugaard. The Republican recently said that he doesn't "know that our standards of education are properly the subject of legislativ­e enactments."

Daugaard in 2016 rejected a bill that would have required transgende­r students to use bathrooms correspond­ing with their sex at birth. Supporters scuttled a similar proposal last year after he threatened to do it again.

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