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‘King and King' class not likely to happen

23rd October 2008

A young girl exclaims to her mom, “Guess what I learned in school today? I learned how a prince married a prince and I can marry a princess.”

Her mother's eyes widen as a law professor at Pepperdine University says, “Think it can't happen? It's already happened.”

This is one of several Yes on Proposition 8 ads on TV and radio claiming that if the man-woman marriage measure fails on Nov. 4, students as young as kindergarten will learn about same-sex marriage.

The professor points out that a Massachusetts district judge in 2007 dismissed a civil rights lawsuit brought by the parents of a second-grader who read “King and King” in class without the school district providing parental notification. Massachusetts' curricula “encourage instruction for pre-kindergarten through fifth-grade students concerning different types of people and families.”

California educators, however, say the state education curricula does not address marriage. It's up to local school districts, they say.

Although the proposed amendment says nothing about public school education, it has emerged as a central issue in this hotly contested measure that has had both sides volleying charges of unfair political advertising.

“We teach the California standards, and marriage, of any kind, is not part of the California standards or required to be taught by state Education Code as the television ad states,” Palm Springs Unified Superintendent Lorri McCune said via e-mail on Wednesday.

“Passage of Proposition 8 will not change anything that is taught or not taught in our classrooms.”

Proposition 8 on the Nov. 4 ballot would amend the state Constitution defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

A yes vote would reverse the state Supreme Court's 4-3 decision in May that found a ban on same-sex marriage that voters approved in 2000 unconstitutional.

Same-sex marriage is an issue that resonates with many locally as the Palm Springs area boasts one of the largest gay populations per capita in the U.S. and is renowned for its gay-friendly businesses and events.

Gays and lesbians have been legally marrying in the state and the Coachella Valley since June 17.

Tolerance lessons

Opponents of the measure say the ads are deceptive because schools already are required to teach tolerance of gays and lesbians.

To combat anti-gay discrimination, California schools have addressed topics such as gay households, homophobia and sexual orientation for years, well before the state Supreme Court made same-sex marriage legal this year.

The California Teachers Association, the California School Boards Association and state Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell have all maintained Proposition 8 has nothing to do with public school education.

“The Yes on 8 ads are alarming and irresponsible,” O'Connell has said in statements.

“Our public schools are not required to teach about marriage. And, in fact, curriculum involving health issues is chose by local school governing board.”

Proposition 8 supporters received fodder for their claims earlier this month when a public charter school took 18 first-graders on a field trip to San Francisco City Hall, with parental permission, where their teacher and her female partner had married.

“The other side's argument is (Proposition 8) has nothing to do with education. Our argument is this has everything to do with education,” said Chip White, a Proposition 8 spokesman. “It's already happening.”

About 52,000 children are being raised by two mothers or two fathers in California, which is one of 12 states with comprehensive anti-bullying laws that apply to gay students and children with unconventional families.

The need for such awareness training was brought home to California in February, when a 15-year-old who sometimes wore feminine clothing and talked about being gay was shot to death at his Oxnard junior high school. A classmate has pleaded not guilty to murder and hate-crime charges.

The education code specifies that marriage should be discussed in sex education classes. But districts are not required to hold the classes and parents can have their children excused if the course conflicts with their moral values. Most California districts do not teach sex ed.

California gives local districts authority — and in the case of sex education, the imperative — to adopt curricula that reflect community mores while meeting certain standards.

“We teach tolerance and acceptance,” said Shari Stewart, president of the Palm Springs Unified school board.

“We don't specifically have a curriculum (regarding) sexual orientation. We only teach what's on the state test.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: My Desert