Last Friday,
Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds signed SF
496 (full
text) which prohibits public schools from providing "any program, curriculum,
test, survey, questionnaire, promotion, or instruction relating to gender
identity or sexual orientation to students in kindergarten through grade six.
It adds the requirement that various programs and educational materials be
"age-appropriate", which is defined in the law as:
topics,
messages and teaching methods suitable to particular ages or age groups of
children and adolescents, based on developing cognitive, emotional, and
behavioral capacity typical for the age or age group. “Age-appropriate” does
not include any material with descriptions or visual depictions of a sex
act....
School
libraries can only contain "age-appropriate" material, except
(pursuant to a pre-existing section of Iowa law (Sec. 280.6)):
religious
books such as the Bible, the Torah, and the Koran shall not be excluded from
any public school or institution in the state, nor shall any child be required
to read such religious books contrary to the wishes of the child’s parent or
guardian.
The new law
amends the statutory health education requirement to eliminate the required
teaching about "HPV and the availability of a vaccine to prevent HPV, and
acquired immune deficiency syndrome."
The law
prohibits schools from giving parents false or misleading information about a
student's gender transition intent and requires school districts to inform
parents of their student's request for gender-affirming care from a licensed
practitioner employed by the school district.
The new law
also provides:
[A] parent
or guardian bears the ultimate responsibility, and has the fundamental,
constitutionally protected right, to make decisions affecting the parent’s or
guardian’s minor child, including decisions related to the minor child’s
medical care, moral upbringing, religious upbringing, residence, education, and
extracurricular activities. Any and all restrictions of this right shall be
subject to strict scrutiny.
The law also requires school districts to publish policies relating to parents' requests for removal of materials from school libraries or classrooms and policies for requesting a student not be provided with certain materials.
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