Mandatory K-12 sex education bill advances in House
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[March 18, 2021]
By Peter Hancock
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois House committee
advanced a bill Wednesday that would mandate all public school districts
in the state provide a comprehensive, age-appropriate curriculum on sex
education, sexual abuse awareness and healthy relationships for all
grades, K-12.
Illinois currently has a law that leaves the option of teaching sex
education up to the discretion of local school districts, but House Bill
1736, dubbed the Responsible Education for Adolescents and Children, or
REACH Act, would make it mandatory.
“This whole idea came about because students were reaching out and
asking for this in their curriculum,” Rep. Kathleen Willis, D-Addison,
the bill’s chief sponsor, said during a virtual hearing. “There are many
schools that do not have this, and that is one of the most important
things and one of the reasons I jumped on board.”
Willis said the bill calls for developing three curriculums. For
students in kindergarten through 2nd grade, it would focus on personal
safety, identifying trusted adults and respecting others. For grades
3-5, it would focus on personal safety and healthy relationships,
bullying prevention, harassment, abuse, anatomy, puberty, hygiene, body
image, sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expressions.
In grades 6-12, the curriculum would include instruction in the concepts
of consent, sexual harassment, interpersonal violence, the benefits of
abstinence, pregnancy prevention and sexually transmitted infection
prevention.
The bill calls for the Illinois State Board of Education to develop
educational standards for each grade level, but it would allow local
districts to develop their own curricula. The current version of the
bill calls for those to be in place no later than July 1, 2022, but
Willis said she plans to propose further amendments that would allow
ISBE more time to develop the standards.
The bill would also allow parents to opt out of allowing their children
to receive the instruction.
Julia Strehlow, a licensed social worker with the Chicago Children’s
Advocacy Center, an agency that responds to reports of child sexual
abuse from child welfare and law enforcement officials, said she
believes it’s important to begin educating children about sexuality and
abuse in early grades.
Nationally, she said, the median age of child sex abuse victims is 9,
and in the Chicago center where she works, the median age is 8.
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Rep. Kathleen Willis, D-Addison, testifies during a
virtual committee hearing about her bill that would mandate that all
public schools in Illinois teach comprehensive sex education in all
grades. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
“Currently, there's no mandate to educate children about their
bodies or who to talk to about unsafe touches before the age of 8,
or really actually at any age in terms of mandates,” Strehlow said.
“We also know that child sexual abuse has a significant lasting
impact on the mental health and overall well-being of the child
victim in their family costing close to $300,000 per individual
throughout their lifetime. So we must start early to stop it.”
Portions of the bill, however, are drawing strong opposition from
anti-abortion groups who argue that the upper grade-level curriculum
amounts to promoting abortion.
According to the bill, the grades 6-12 curriculum would have to
include “unbiased information and non-stigmatizing information about
the options regarding pregnancy, including parenting, adoption, and
abortion.”
It also calls for instruction in “Diverse sexual orientations,
gender identities, and gender expressions, including affirmative
representation and health-positive instruction.”
“So both of these situations are indoctrinating our students in the
public schools, against their beliefs against their parents’
beliefs,” said Ralph Rivera, a lobbyist for Illinois Right to Life
Action and the Pro Family Alliance. “And that's very important
because that's where we come from. This is a religious belief for
us.”
Rep. Avery Bourne, R-Morrisonville, the ranking Republican on the
committee, opposed the bill, arguing that imposing such a mandate on
schools should require a longer discussion.
“This is a really drastic departure from our current sex education
requirements,” she said. “The fact that we're requiring this of
every school, certainly the different curriculum that will be
included is different. And I think that it deserves a much longer
and more in depth hearing than what we've been able to have today.”
The committee voted 14-7 to advance the bill to the full House, even
though Willis said it will need to return to the committee in the
weeks to come to consider further amendments that have not yet been
drafted.
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Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |