Sponsors say focus of Ohio’s ‘Parents’ Bill of Rights’ is on mental health
“There is a gap. There is a huge gap in social and emotional learning that needs to be fixed,” said the chairman of the Ohio House Behavioral Health and Recovery Support Committee. “We need to figure out what is falling apart.”
The bill also requires schools to notify parents of “materials that contain sexually explicit content and that identify certain educational materials and sexually explicit subjects” before instruction begins. If you object, you must provide alternative learning materials.
Carruthers said the bill does not ban age-appropriate content, but rather ensures that parents know they are teaching material. Sexually Explicit Content is defined by the Code as “descriptions or representations of photographs, photographs, drawings, motion picture films, digital images, or similar visual representations depicting sexual acts.”
“This is a priority, not a limitation,” she said. “Our priority is to equip students with the knowledge to succeed. That means outlining a curriculum based on literacy, math and mental health education.”
Ohio students lag behind in math and English than they did pre-pandemic, but student performance is better than in 2020.
Groups of students who were already lagging behind their peers, including black and Hispanic students, economically disadvantaged students, students with disabilities, and English language learners, saw an even wider performance gap than before the pandemic. I’m here.
Some people’s concern is that the bill would follow other Republican-backed laws proposed or enacted across the country. It imposes strict limits on what can and cannot be taught in public schools. This is a 250% increase this year compared to 2021.
Carruthers argued that House Bill 722 would not stop age-appropriate coaching, but would increase transparency.
“There is a trend across the country to move away from parental involvement. This law simply guarantees parents the right to be involved and informed about what is going on[in their children’s education],” she said. said. “There will be some parents who aren’t there, but at least they have a right.”
Ohio’s proposed bill removes some of the more restrictive aspects contained in other states’ so-called “parental bills of rights,” Carruthers said. The bill will not prohibit or remove books from being removed, as it did in Missouri. Carruthers said he would oppose any attempt to ban the book.
A concern about Ohio’s proposed bill is “how vague the term ‘sexually explicit content’ is,” Equity Ohio spokesperson Kathryn Poe told the Ohio Capital Journal. .
Poe’s concern is that there are no exceptions to the health, biology or anatomy classes written in the bill, but calling it a parental rights bill is just a pretense to a Columbus-based news outlet. He said he believed
“I know who’s called here. It’s LGBT people,” she said.
Carruthers disagreed, adding that it would not negatively impact health, biology, or anatomy classes, nor would it affect the LGBTQ community.
“Let children remain children. Let them explore and do their own thing. They don’t have to bear all of our problems yet,” she said. Our numbers seem to be going down and down, we’re all focusing too much on the wrong areas and now we need to get those scores back in the general areas.”
The bill has not yet been assigned to the committee and the General Assembly will not resume until after the November general election.
Staff writer Eileen McCrory contributed to this story.