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An anti-capitalist science teacher has revealed she uses a survey to ask her students about their preferred pronouns - which she then would not tell their parents about.
Mandi Jung, who teaches at Highland Park Middle School in Saint Paul, Minnesota, shared the curriculum - which includes the woke survey - on her website at the beginning of the school year.
The survey includes questions about the students' preferred pronouns and names, and whether those can be used when speaking directly with a student's parents.
The questions suggest the students' preferred pronouns and names will be kept a secret from their parents or guardians. And one legal expert told Fox News that surveys administered without parental consent may violate federal law.
Mandi Jung, who teaches science at Highland Park Middle School in Saint Paul, Minnesota, revealed that she uses a survey that asks her students about their preferred pronouns
The survey includes questions about the students' preferred pronouns and names, and whether those can be used when speaking directly with a student's parents
One of the links leads to the survey that asks students about their preferred pronouns. Some questions suggest that their answers are being kept secret from their parents or guardians
On the middle school teacher's website, there is a plethora of resources which she introduces with: 'These are all resources that I use or have used at the beginning of the school year. Please enjoy!'
One of the links leads to the survey that asks students about their preferred pronouns. Some questions suggest that their answers are being kept secret from their parents or guardians.
'Please answer all these questions as honestly as possible. We will use this information to make your school year more enjoyable!' the survey begins.
The first questions ask what the student would like to be called and their preferred pronoun.
Then it asks: 'What name should I use when speaking to your parents?'
Another question is: 'What pronouns should we use when we talk about you? (CHOOSE AS MANY AS YOU WANT)'
'Is it okay to use the pronouns you selected above when we talk to your parents?'
'Is it okay to use the pronouns you selected above when we talk to other students or the class?
The first questions ask what the student would like to be called and their preferred pronoun
Another question is: 'What pronouns should we use when we talk about you? (CHOOSE AS MANY AS YOU WANT)'
'Is it okay to use the pronouns you selected above when we talk to other students or the class?' is another question that is on the survey
Woke teacher Jung posts frequently on TikTok, which garnered hundreds of thousands of likes on each video with many of her posts centered LGBT-focused content.
Legal expert Kimberly S. Hermann from the Southeastern Legal Foundation told Fox News that surveys administered without parental consent may violate federal law.
'That we live in a country where schools are actively pushing kids to change their gender and hide it from their parents is something I never thought I would face as a parent,' Hermann said.
'Surveys like this one not only violate the law, but they are aimed at separating children from their parents. Parents must know that when schools ask children about their emotional health, sexual identity, and family relationships without parental consent they violate federal law.'
Concealing gender identity and transitions from parents in school has recently become a controversial topic across the country.
Earlier this year, a school district in northern Virginia made a decision to require all teachers to complete a training program that says all students - including preschoolers - can request to be addressed by different names or pronouns without parental permission.
Fairfax County Public Schools - a school district that has made headlines for woke policies and clashes over teaching critical race theory - started the program 'Supporting Gender Expansive and Transgender Youth' on July 22.
The training details requests students can make without parental permission, according to materials obtained by the Washington Examiner.
These requests include asking to be called 'by his chosen name in class,' requests to use 'a private bathroom' and 'requests to use the locker room that corresponds with her identified gender.'
The slides also inform teachers on how to respond to students who express a desire to be addressed by a new name or pronoun.
Earlier this year, a slide from a Fairfax County Public Schools teacher training program shows that parental permission is not required for a student who wishes to be called by a different name or use a bathroom corresponding to their gender identity
The slides, which were shown at the training on July 22, say teachers must 'create student centered experiences' and 'affirm and sustain gender identity, gender expression, and racial, linguistic, ability, and cultural identities'
The slides, which were shown at the training on July 22, say teachers must 'create student centered experiences' and 'affirm and sustain gender identity, gender expression, and racial, linguistic, ability, and cultural identities.'
Teachers are also instructed to 'elevate voices of the marginalized' and 'recognize and disrupt systems that create inequitable outcomes.'
One slide shown at the teacher training in July shows the student's options for requesting to identify by another name or gender. The first option is a name change in class, where a teacher is required to address the student by their 'chosen' name.
The training program includes this slide that poses a question on student gender identity
Another slide from the Fairfax County Public Schools teacher training shows the different options for a student who wishes to change their name
The second option allows students to use the locker room that corresponds with her identified gender, a third option is the student's request of the use of a private bathroom.
The fourth option - none of the above - is checked, meaning parental permission is not needed for any.
The training program was assigned a month after the district's school board approved an expansion to its student code of conduct to include penalties for students who 'misgendered' transgender students.