The Boston Globe

Florida expands ban on talk of gender identity in schools

Lesson limits apply through 12th grade

- By Anthony Izaguirre

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — The Florida Board of Education approved a ban on classroom instructio­n about sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in all grades on Wednesday, expanding the state’s Parental Rights in Education law at the request of Governor Ron DeSantis.

The proposal will take effect after a procedural notice period that lasts about a month, according to an education department spokesman.

The rule change would ban lessons on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity through 12th grade, unless required by existing state standards or as part of reproducti­ve health instructio­n that students can choose not to take. Florida currently bans such lessons in kindergart­en through third grade.

The DeSantis administra­tion put forward the proposal last month as part of the Republican’s aggressive conservati­ve agenda, as DeSantis leans heavily into cultural divides ahead of his looming White House candidacy.

DeSantis has not commented on the proposal. He previously directed questions to Education Commission­er Manny Diaz Jr., who said it is meant to clarify confusion around the existing law and reinforce that teachers should not deviate from existing curriculum­s.

“We’re not removing anything here,” Diaz Jr. said on Wednesday. “All we are doing is we are setting the expectatio­ns so our teachers are clear: that they are to teach to the standards.”

The prohibitio­n, which began last year with the law banning sexual orientatio­n and gender identity lessons in kindergart­en through third grade, has drawn intense backlash from critics who argue it marginaliz­es LGBTQ+ people.

“Let’s put it plainly: This is part of the governor’s assault on freedom,” Joe Saunders, senior political director of the LGBTQ advocacy group Equality Florida, said in a statement. The policy will “further stigmatize and isolate a population of young people who need our support now more than ever.”

Opponents say the rule change doesn’t improve vague terminolog­y in the law. They say phrases such as “classroom instructio­n,” “age appropriat­e,” and “developmen­tally appropriat­e,” could be broadly interprete­d and lead to self-censorship by educators.

Educators have said they don’t expect a major change in lesson plans given that teachers adhere to state education curriculum­s, fueling criticism that the policy is a culture war cudgel meant to satisfy conservati­ve Republican­s.

The current law also provoked an ongoing feud with Disney, one of the state’s largest employers.

The entertainm­ent giant publicly opposed the legislatio­n last year, and as punishment, DeSantis pushed lawmakers to give him control of a self-governing district Disney has run for decades to oversee its theme park properties.

Before a set of new DeSantis appointees could assume control of the district, Disney’s board passed restrictiv­e covenants that strip the incoming members of most of their powers, blunting the governor’s retaliatio­n.

DeSantis then directed Florida’s chief inspector general to investigat­e the Disney board’s move, and has vowed to take additional revenge against the company through legislatio­n.

 ?? SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES ?? Governor Ron DeSantis spoke to crowds Wednesday in North Charleston, S.C., ahead of his looming 2024 presidenti­al run.
SEAN RAYFORD/GETTY IMAGES Governor Ron DeSantis spoke to crowds Wednesday in North Charleston, S.C., ahead of his looming 2024 presidenti­al run.

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