Georgia school superintendent asks Gwinnett to wait on sex ed decision
Dozens of parents, students, teachers and advocates in Gwinnett County have weighed in on a potential change to the sex education curriculum in Georgia’s largest school district.
State School Superintendent Richard Woods has joined them, asking district leaders to delay their decision — scheduled for Thursday — on a new health curriculum.
Woods, a Republican, stopped short of recommending the school board adopt either the longstanding Choosing the Best that’s used in Gwinnett and about 450 other Georgia schools or the proposed comprehensive sex ed program HealthSmart.
“I respectfully request that the board delay adoption to give the district time to ensure compliance in the proposed curriculum with state law, standards, and board rule,” Woods wrote in a letter sent to Gwinnett Superintendent Calvin Watts and the district school board Tuesday.
Ultimately, Woods doesn’t have a say in the matter. The decision lies with the school board.
The text of the letter circulated on social media after it was sent. The state Department of Education provided a copy of the letter Wednesday to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Woods said his office began looking into the proposed curriculum change inGwinnett after hearing from residents and seeing the district assert that HealthSmart was more aligned to state health standards.
He said the opposite: Choosing the Best “presents itself to be better aligned” with the staterequired emphasis on abstinence.
Woods didn’t say HealthSmart would not comply with health and sex education standards, but he said it goes beyond state standards. He noted HealthSmart includes elementary school resources beyond the state-required lessons about sexual abuse and assault awareness.
“The proposed curriculum seems to go above this requirement, and it appears local public feedback does not support expansion into this grade band,” Woods said.
Choosing the Best has been criticized for having a limited scope focused only on negative outcomes. Supporters of comprehensive sex education point to studies that show more than half of high school students nationwide report being sexually active. They say comprehensive programs still promote abstinence but offer information that students can use to help make safer decisions. Their opponents argue that contradicts messages about abstinence.
A panel of Gwinnett health teachers recommended adoption of HealthSmart, which was used in pilot programs and eventually received the endorsement of an advisory council and administrators before coming to the school board.