by Melissa Twigg, Telegraph
Schools Diversity Week has become a fixture in many schools across the UK, but some parents are concerned about the focus on trans rights
Sarah Jones* has a happy, energetic, sporty daughter named Emma. She has just turned nine and loves nothing more than pulling on her football kit and running to the local park, a ball tucked under her arm. If Emma had been born a decade earlier, Jones would have seen this as little more than a carefree phase in her daughter’s childhood. Now, she worries someone might suggest Emma was born in the wrong body.
“Emma isn’t girly,” says Jones. “She plays competitive sports and doesn’t wear dresses; she’s fantastic. But these conversations around gender identity are very harmful to children who don’t conform to stereotypical ideas of it. I don’t want her to think that just because she doesn’t wear pink, she should be a boy.”
So when Jones received a letter on Monday afternoon informing her that her daughter’s school would be celebrating Schools Diversity Week for the next three days – and that Wednesday would be dedicated entirely to discussions, workshops and a Pride march – she was alarmed. The letter said parents would be welcome to come to the school at Wednesday lunchtime to discuss the events taking place.
