Hogan’s Policy 713 changes a ‘disappointment’ for Anglophone East councillor
When teachers call students by name in the classroom, that’s a “formal” use of their name, on par with the name they have recorded in online records and report cards. That’s how Education Minister Bill Hogan has defined the term in a newly revised Policy 713 on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity. Informal use of names, according to Hogan and the Department of Education, happens only in social interactions outside of the classroom.
The new definition means that the province’s newly revised Policy 713 now explicitly requires teachers to get parental consent before using the preferred name of students aged 15 and younger. The previous version appeared to remove the requirement for teachers to use preferred names for students under 16, but did not restrict them from doing so.
Hogan’s definition of formal name use lies in contrast to how Kelly Lamrock, the province’s Child and Youth Advocate, defined use of names in his report on Policy 713 published last week. Lamrock describes informal use of names as including “classroom communication, extracurricular and co-curricular activities, free time, and social conversation,” and he contrasts those informal uses to official school uses such as online records and report cards.
Lamrock has heavily criticized Policy 713 for creating rules around use of names for trans and genderqueer students that do not apply to other groups.… Continue