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Kindergartners who attend Pride School Atlanta will be encouraged to explore, express and promote their alternative sexuality. Kindergartners? Ā “Unstructured learning,” it is called by the school, Ā focusesĀ on exploration of their identity, the lifestyle and self-appreciation and the school will evidently will be less interested in Ā reading, writing and arithmetic. Ā Its only a matter of time before more of these schools pop up across the country, using children as a pawn in a sick and twisted agenda against God’s plan for marriage.

 

From Breitbart:

Pride School Atlanta will serve K-12 LGBT students, as well as any students who feel ā€œdifferentā€ from others and do not feel supported in their regular school setting.

ā€œKids have full permission to be themselves ā€” as well as educators,ā€ said school founder and transgender teacher Christian Zsilavetz. ā€œWhere thereā€™s no wondering, ā€˜Is this teacher going to be a person for me to be myself with?ā€™ This is a place where they [students] can just open up and be the best person they can be.ā€

gay pride with childZsilavetz, 45, said support for transgender teachers is often not providedĀ by administrators in public schools.

ā€œWhen [LGBT] kids can see you, when they know that they can come to you, theyā€™re less likely to die (or be suicidal), for one,ā€ Zsilavetz said. ā€œTheyā€™re less likely to get pregnant, when they donā€™t really want to get pregnant. Theyā€™re less likely to get into drugs and alcohol and into depression.ā€

According to Yahoo.com, Pride School will first be housed in the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta church when it opens next fall. Tuition will cost approximately $13,000 per student, with financial aid available.

Though Pride School is the first school primarily for LGBT youth that is more unstructured in its approach to learning than traditional schools,Ā there are others in the planning stages for youth who feel alienated in public schools, says the news report.

ā€œThereā€™s a number of kids who come from the Southā€¦ migrating to places like New York and other cities because they feel like itā€™s more tolerant for them,ā€ said Ross Murray, a programs director for gay advocacy group GLAAD. ā€œThey should be able to stay in their homes, their communities. I think having a school like this in Atlantaā€¦ it means itā€™s much more regionally connected. If a student does need a place where they can be safe from bullying, from peers who want to harass or harm them, theyā€™re not going to have to travel tons of distance to do that.ā€

Pride School is modeled after the Harvey Milk school in New York City and other similar education institutions for LGBT students, though these schools are more structured in their learning models, according to Yahoo.

Emma Grace, 16, who identifies herself as ā€œqueer,ā€ says she is excited about attending Pride School, where she can further explore her gender.

ā€œI think itā€™s greatly needed for a school to have LGBT-affirming surroundings and environment,ā€ she said. ā€œItā€™s still very much a hidden issue. Not a lot people talk about it because theyā€™re afraid.ā€

LGBT advocacy group Georgia Equality says in 2010 it ā€œcalled upon the state legislature to immediately address the problem of bullying and harassment in schools,ā€ following a report that found ā€œnearly 9 in 10 LGBT studentsā€ said they were harassed within the last school year, and 3 in 10 reported either missing a class or an entire day of school because they felt ā€œunsafe.ā€

The group states that in its research it found less than 30 percent of school districts in the state had ā€œLGBT specific-inclusive bullying prevention policies.ā€ Over the past several years, Georgia Equalityā€™s network, called GSA Connect, has worked to train students in the formation of Gay-Straight Alliances (GSAs)ā€”student-run clubsā€”in public schools.

According to Yahoo, two of LGBT advocates most notable achievements in Georgia are that members of the Atlanta Board of Education and school district staff marched in the 2015 Atlanta Pride Parade and the recognition of the first transgender student to the Walton High School homecoming court during the homecoming football game.

 

By Dr. Susan Berry

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