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Some School Boards Argue that Parents Should Know if Their Children are Trans. California Says That’s Wrong.

Some School Boards Argue that Parents Should Know if Their Children are Trans. California Says That’s Wrong.

We’ll look into the fight between California and local districts and how it fits into the conservative parents’ rights movement changing how schools are run nationwide.

KQED's Forum

September 11, 202355m 44s

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Show Notes

Several California school districts, mostly in more conservative pockets of the state, have recently passed policies requiring that schools notify parents if their children identify as transgender. California is suing the first district to pass the policy, Chino Valley Unified School District, by arguing that the rule violates state privacy laws. But that hasn’t stopped other districts from adopting similar rules, even after a judge barred Chino Valley from implementing its own policy until after the legal case plays out. We’ll look into the fight between California and local districts and how it fits into the conservative parents’ rights movement changing how schools are run nationwide.


Guests:


Carolyn Jones, education reporter, CalMatters


Nicole Carr, Atlanta-based investigative reporter, Propublica


Jordan Darling, city reporter, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin


Robert Marx, assistant professor of child and adolescent development, San Jose State University

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