Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia school superinten­dent asks Gwinnett to wait on sex ed decision

- BY JOSH REYES THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

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.

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