Friday, July 15, 2016

California is the first state where LGBT rights and history will be taught in public schools


The State of California made history this week by becoming the first state in the U.S. to require LGBT rights be taught in schools.

The State’s Board of Education unanimously approved changing instructions given to teachers to comply with a new state law that requires public schools to include historic gay Americans and mark LGBT milestones. 

The State Board of Education is the K-12 policy-making body for academic standards, curriculum, instructional materials, assessments and accountability. The change is part of a larger overhaul of the State’s social science curriculum.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson today announced that the State Board of Education voted to approve the History–Social Science Framework for California Public Schools, which will update and upgrade history and social science instruction in California.

The initial framework will see second graders learn about families with same-sex parents and two years later, in history, pupils will learn about Harvey Milk and how he championed gay rights in San Francisco.

In more senior years, pupils will be taught about gender roles, the Supreme Court ruling, which legalised same-sex marriage and the recent controversy over transgender bathrooms.

The legislation that has seen the changes take effect also prohibits schools from teaching anything that can be seen as discriminatory or will adversely impact the LGBT community.


Mr. Torlakson announced the historical change in California's public education


2 comments:

  1. Broward County Florida (population 1.8 million), the home of Fort Lauderdale, was the nation's first major metropolitan area to make the teaching of gay studies mandatory for all high school students 11 years ago. This is before San Francisco or New York City or Los Angeles.

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  2. Bravo Florida! In this case, the teaching will be mandatory in all State and in all education levels. A new step in the long journey to full equality.

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