More than 2,000 people have signed an calling on the Miami-Dade County school board to adopt new materials for teaching reproductive health and sexual education.
Last week, the board voted 5 to 4 to toss out two health textbooks, after residents opposed to sex ed instruction successfully challenged the materials.
The vote to reject the books means the nation鈥檚 fourth largest school district won鈥檛 be able to teach sex ed 鈥 at least for the next four to eight months while the district restarts the process of adopting new instructional materials.
The Miami-Dade school board is holding a on Thursday at noon to discuss the consequences of not teaching sex education. Advocates behind the group Parents for Children Miami are urging residents to attend the meeting and voice their support for comprehensive sex education.
Marika Lynch, who has been helping organize parents in support of sex ed instruction, said the organization is a 鈥減arent group focused on the accurate, fact-based teaching of all subjects in Miami-Dade schools.鈥
As of 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, 2,025 people had signed the group鈥檚 petition on change.org.
鈥淪exual health education keeps our students safe from not only pregnancy and disease, but from adult predators and bullying. The textbooks cover how to report abuse, in addition to consent and body safety, topics objected to by the small group of people opposing them,鈥 the petition reads in part.
鈥淲e ask the Miami-Dade School Board, which serves all children, to reverse its July 20th vote in order to comply with Florida law and to honor the parents who count on accurate and age-appropriate sex education in our schools as well as the children whose lives may depend on it,鈥 the petition continues.
requires districts to teach comprehensive health education, including 鈥渢he benefits of sexual abstinence as the expected standard and the consequences of teenage pregnancy.鈥
Anna Hochkammer signed the 鈥淪ave Sex Ed鈥 petition. She said she鈥檚 a parent of a student in Miami Palmetto Senior High. Hochkammer is also an elected member of the Pinecrest Village Council.
鈥淲e know in America that when students get information, they鈥檙e less likely to while they鈥檙e still in school, they鈥檙e less likely to be infected with sexually transmitted diseases, and they鈥檙e more likely when they鈥檙e being subject to abuse and other kinds of relationships that we all recognize are not healthy,鈥 Hochkammer said.
鈥淲e know that comprehensive, fact-based, age-appropriate sex education works,鈥 she added.