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Kankakee Times

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Kankakee County school districts mum onstate’s new sex education policy

Sex ed pexels cottonbro

Illinois school districts are now deciding whether or not to opt out of the state's new sex education policy for young children. | Pexels.com / Cottonbro

Illinois school districts are now deciding whether or not to opt out of the state's new sex education policy for young children. | Pexels.com / Cottonbro

Eleven school districts in Kankakee County are mum on Illinois’ new law that aligns sex education policies for grades K-12 with national standards.

In Kankakee County as of June 18, just one of its districts said it would opt out of the provisions for younger children, while 11 other districts have yet to say if they would opt out. The new law, which the state Legislature passed in the form of Senate Bill 818, allows districts to either opt out or adopt the sex education policies for younger children contained in the new law.

During discussions about the new policy in the Legislature, Republicans criticized the plan as being too explicit for young children. Among other provisions, sixth-graders would be expected to define phrases such as oral sex and anal sex, while third-graders would be taught to understand the act of masturbation.

Sex education advocates, however, say the new law won’t result in drastic changes for school districts since it backs up what many schools are already doing in the area of sex education.

The Catholic Conference of Illinois opposed SB 818 when it was being considered by the Legislature, arguing that although the plan offers parents an opt-out provision, many parents won’t be aware of their options. The provisions inappropriately call on fifth-graders to understand sexual orientation issues and for eighth-graders to describe how to put on a condom correctly, according to the Catholic Conference.

GOP gubernatorial frontrunner Darren Bailey, a state senator, has also come out strongly against the sex-education revisions. 

“Students in the second grade may soon be required to identify consent, gender identity and reproduction, while fourth- and fifth-graders would have to define different types of sex,” Bailey said in a prepared statement. “The bill is obscene and fails to align with community standards.” 

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Local School District Decisions on New Sex-ed Policy

School DistrictPositions on Sex-ed Standards
Bourbonnais School District 53Waiting or no response
Bradley Bourbonnais Consolidated High School

District 307

Waiting or no response
Bradley School District 61Waiting or no response
Grant Park Community Unit School District 6Waiting or no response
Herscher Community Unit School District 2Opting out
Kankakee School District 111Waiting or no response
Manteno Community Unit School District 5Waiting or no response
Momence Community Unit School District 1Waiting or no response
Pembroke Community Consolidated School District 259Waiting or no response
St Anne Community Consolidated School District 256Waiting or no response
St Anne Consolidated High School District 302Waiting or no response
St George Community Consolidated School

 District 258

Waiting or no response
Source: LGIS News Service

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