Transgender teacher tells kindergartners: When babies are born, doctors 'guess' if they're boys or girls — 'but sometimes the doctor is wrong'



A transgender first grade teacher told a group of kindergartners, first graders, and second graders that when babies are born, doctors "guess" if they're boys or girls — but the teacher added that "sometimes the doctor is wrong" and "makes an incorrect guess."

What are the details?

The teacher, Ray Skyer, posted a Facebook video last month showing the "Identity Share" Zoom session with elementary-aged students from Brooke Roslindale, a charter public school about 30 minutes south of Boston.

Here's a clip of the transgender portion of Skyer's address to the young students:

.@BrookeSchool 1st grade teacher records an \u201cidentity share\u201d zoom call with K-2 grades where he spoke about being trans. \n\n\u201cWhen babies are born the dr looks & makes a guess on whether the baby is a boy or girl. Sometimes the dr is wrong. If they are right, the baby is cisgender\u201dpic.twitter.com/qYGFm9B7rF
— Libs of Tik Tok (@Libs of Tik Tok) 1649623042

Skyer said:

So something that’s really cool and unique about who I am is that I am transgender. [...]

So when babies are born, the doctor looks at them, and they make a guess about whether the baby is a boy or girl based on what they look like. And most of the time that guess is 100% correct; there are no issues whatsoever. But sometimes the doctor is wrong; the doctor makes an incorrect guess. When a doctor makes a correct guess, that’s when a person is called cisgender. When a doctor’s guess is wrong that’s when they are transgender.

So I’m a man, but when I was a baby, the doctors told my parents I was a girl. And so my parents gave me a name that girls typically have and bought me clothes that girls typically wear, and until I was 18 years old everyone thought I was a girl. And this was super, super uncomfortable for me because I knew that wasn’t right. The way I like to describe it is like wearing a super-itchy sweater. The longer you wear it the itchier it gets, and the only way to make the itching stop is to have everyone see and know the person that you really are. So when I was 18, I told my family and my friends that I’m really a boy, and it was like this huge weight had been lifted off of my shoulders, and I had the freedom to be who I truly am. And even though this experience is super-challenging sometimes ... it made me the person I am, and I’m super-proud to be transgender.

The text accompanying Skyer's longer Facebook video of the Zoom call is titled "BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN??” It reads as follows:

Whenever there are bills introduced targeting trans youth, we always hear the argument that these laws are “protecting” their peers and “preventing confusion.” At this point, I’ve had many conversations with many young children (I’m a 1st grade teacher) about what being transgender is and never once have I been met with any fear or confusion. I’ve even been the recipient of a group hug! Children just get it, it’s as simple as that.

This is a video from an Identity Share I did yesterday over Zoom with many of our kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grade students. When I opened up my classroom’s Zoom room immediately after, here are some things my students said:

“Great job, Mr. Skyer!”
“I think my family is a lot like yours!”
“How did you grow a beard?” (My answer was just that I grew up!)
“Where are you in those pictures?”
“Your brother is taller than you AND has a bigger beard!” (Thanks, friend.)
“Who is the homework leader for today??”

Learning about and embracing differences is something that comes naturally and is exciting to children. Let’s follow their lead.

Feel free to share!

'I talk to my students about what it means to be trans all the time'

On the day of the 2020 presidential election, Skyer shared on Facebook about starting a letter-writing campaign called "Friends of Marsha" — named after trans "trailblazer" Marsha P. Johnson — to "provide LGBTQ+ youth with a sense of hope and connection in the form of a physical, handwritten letter (by yours truly), something tangible that they can hold on to."

On March 31 — the Trans Day of Visibility — Skyer posted on the Friends of Marsha Instagram page that "it seems fitting that on today of all days one of my first graders asked me what my favorite part of my identity is. I talk to my students about what it means to be trans all the time, to the point where they now ask other adults in our school community whether they are cisgender or transgender. It has been so meaningful to 1. even be able to talk about LGBTQ topics in school 2. be open and visible about being trans and 3. have students see trans individuals like Marsha P. Johnson and @lavernecox as inspirational leaders. I’m looking forward to the day where my experience is not a unique one and all trans individuals can visibly exist without fear."

Anything else?

Brooke Charter Schools "is a network of tuition-free, public charter schools providing an academically rigorous education to students from Boston and Chelsea. Admission is based on a random lottery. There are no admissions applications or interviews, and there is no tuition fee. All students in Boston Public Schools and Chelsea Public Schools — including English language learners, limited English proficient students, and special education students — are encouraged to apply through the lottery."

(H/T: The Daily Wire)

Gay kindergarten teacher on Florida law guarding parental rights: 'It scares me to death' that I won't be able to talk about 'my partner' to my students



A gay kindergarten teacher in Florida said "it scares me to death" that he won't be able to talk to his students about his "partner" due to the Parental Rights in Education bill Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed into law Monday.

The law — which left-wing pro-LBGTQ types have falsely referred to as the "Don't Say Gay" bill — prohibits classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in grades K-3, and it doesn't use the word "gay" or prevent its use.

What did the teacher say?

“It really hits hard in my heart professionally and personally,” teacher Cory Bernaert said in an interview MSNBC posted Tuesday. He added that "it truly makes me feel like I am not trusted as a professional. I know my kindergarten standards through and through, and nowhere in our curriculum does it have anything about teaching sexual orientation or sexual identity. So for them to say that that's happening ... it's kinda crazy."

Bernaert — who teaches at Barbara A. Harvey Elementary School in Parrish and who spoke about the issue to local media earlier this month — added to MSNBC that "we should be able to have discussions, and that’s what we’re encouraged to do in kindergarten." He added that "my kids do have questions. They want to know who my partner is in pictures outside of my classroom, and I should be able to speak to them.”

The MSNBC interviewer asked Bernaert if he's concerned he won't be able to talk about his "own personal home life" with students, then interjected that she knows "everything" about her child's teachers "because my kid tells me."

Bernaert replied, "Absolutely. You are 100% correct. That’s what we do as educators; we build relationships with our kids. And in order to build relationships, you talk about your home life, you talk about what you do on the weekends. That's building community ... it scares me to death that I'm not going to be able to have these conversations with my children, because they’re going to ask me what I did on the weekend. I don’t want to have to hide that my partner and I went paddle boarding this weekend.”

He added that his students will ask, "What does 'partner' mean, Mr. Bernaert?” and then wondered, “Can I tell them what it means?”

Bernaert also said that if gay parents of his students don't want to or don't know how to answer such a question, then his students "are gonna come to me and ask me."

He also told MSNBC the new law opens up schools and teachers to parental lawsuits.