AUG 10, 4:20 PM
Montgomery County Schools Fight Over LGBTQ+ Content, Explained
Sarah Y. Kim
School starts Aug. 28 in Montgomery County, following several months of protests by parents over LGBTQ+ inclusive course material in Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS). In May, three families filed a lawsuit against school board members and superintendent Dr. Monifa McKnight, demanding that parents be allowed to opt their children out of engaging with the material. ... On Wednesday, a federal judge heard arguments from advocates from both sides in a hearing that lasted more than three hours before a packed courtroom, MoCo 360
reported. The judge, Deborah Boardman, is expected to issue a ruling by the beginning of the school year on a preliminary injunction requested by the plaintiffs. The judges ruling would not be a final resolution of the lawsuit, but will determine whether or not parents can immediately opt students out of required LGBTQ+ inclusive materials while the lawsuit moves forward.
MCPS has been taking measures in recent years to be more inclusive of LGBTQ+ students. In the 2022-2023 school year, the school district
added six new books featuring LGBTQ+ people to the supplemental curriculum for pre-K through fifth grade. MCPS later issued guidelines clarifying that parents and students could not choose to opt out of LGBTQ+ inclusive instructional materials, and that teachers would not give parents prior notice when students were assigned inclusive readings.
Parents and advocates have protested outside the last several school board meetings. A rally in late June drew hundreds of protesters, chanting protect our children and carrying signs reading Protect Religious Freedom and Opt Out Now. In response, MCPS issued
a rare statement saying it would not revisit the issue and that they remained committed to cultivating an inclusive and welcoming learning environment.
The Montgomery County protests have been led primarily by Muslim and Ethiopian Orthodox families. The parents have argued that the schools policies violate their religious rights, with some asserting that their opposition does not stem from homophobic views. Organizers have been joined by conservative Christian activists from outside the county, but the MCPS protesters have kept extremist far-right groups like Moms for Liberty at a distance. LGBTQ+ inclusive course material has also faced pushback from parents elsewhere in the country, including in
Virginia, where parents are allowed to opt their students out of material that is considered sexually explicit (the term is broadly defined).
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Tyrone Turner contributed reporting.