- Moderator
- #85
Sideways
VIP Member
@shimmerz - good grief! That policy documentation is extraordinary!
It’s sad to me that good supportive inclusive ideas and suggestions get lost in the bureaucratic nightmare of policies about where kids can/should get changed after athletics and setting a formal ‘name change’ day.
Having been sexually abused at school, I’m also not a fan of the idea of letting students decide what change room they’d be most comfortable getting changed in. In circumstances where there is a transgender student (which is an overwhelming minority of times), it makes sense to talk to the students who will be impacted.
If you have a class with a blind kid and accommodations need to be made? You talk to the students involved. Same with any kind of minority that needs to accommodated respectfully. It’s not possible to create a policy document for any and every conceivable minority group, covering every conceivable issue that each of those minorities might face.
Surely it would be more beneficial to teach tolerance, and allow schools some flexibility to meet individual student needs when they arise. Tolerance and flexibility are things that can be applied to all minority groups with special needs.
It’s sad to me that good supportive inclusive ideas and suggestions get lost in the bureaucratic nightmare of policies about where kids can/should get changed after athletics and setting a formal ‘name change’ day.
Having been sexually abused at school, I’m also not a fan of the idea of letting students decide what change room they’d be most comfortable getting changed in. In circumstances where there is a transgender student (which is an overwhelming minority of times), it makes sense to talk to the students who will be impacted.
If you have a class with a blind kid and accommodations need to be made? You talk to the students involved. Same with any kind of minority that needs to accommodated respectfully. It’s not possible to create a policy document for any and every conceivable minority group, covering every conceivable issue that each of those minorities might face.
Surely it would be more beneficial to teach tolerance, and allow schools some flexibility to meet individual student needs when they arise. Tolerance and flexibility are things that can be applied to all minority groups with special needs.
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