Law & Courts

Parents Lose Appeal Over School’s Gender Identity Notification Policy

By Mark Walsh — February 19, 2025 6 min read
A person holds up LGTBQ+ pride flags during the Pride Parade in New York, June 24, 2018.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

A federal appeals court has rejected a parental rights-based objection to a Massachusetts school district’s policy of allowing students to determine whether their parents should be notified about gender transitions and their choice of new names and pronouns.

The policy “plausibly creates a space for students to express their identity without worrying about parental backlash,” said a unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, in Boston. “By cultivating an environment where students may feel safe in expressing their gender identity, the protocol endeavors to remove psychological barriers for transgender students and equalizes educational opportunities.”

The Feb. 18 decision in Foote v. Ludlow School Committee comes amid a conservative-led backlash to school policies supporting transgender students, including President Donald Trump’s recent executive orders declaring that there are only two sexes and instructing his administration to develop policies to prohibit public schools from assisting gender transitions and to bar transgender students from girls’ sports. The U.S. Supreme Court, with a six-justice conservative majority, has signaled a growing interest in transgender issues in education.

The Trump executive orders were not an issue in the case of a middle school student in the 2,200-student Ludlow, Mass., school system. During the 2020-21 school year, an 11-year-old 6th grader identified in court papers as B.F., who was assigned female at birth, began to question their gender identity.

Parents seek to handle their child’s feelings about gender without the school

The student approached a teacher and discussed their feelings of insecurity and low self-esteem, as well as their feelings about their gender identity and sexual orientation. The teacher contacted the student’s parents to let them know.

B.F.’s mother soon sent an email to district officials and the student’s teachers that said, “I appreciate your concern and would like to let you know that her father and I will be getting her the professional help she needs at this time. With that being said, we request that you do not have any private conversations with [B.F.] in regards to this matter.”

But in the meantime, B.F. sent an email to their teachers and counselor announcing that “I am genderqueer” and that they were changing their first name (leading to the new initials G.F.).

The school began following the district’s protocol, which calls for teachers and others to use students’ chosen names and pronouns and instructs them not to inform parents about their child’s expressions of gender without that student’s consent. The unwritten policy was prompted by 2012 guidance from the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education meant to support transgender students.

The parents soon found out about the change and complained to the district superintendent. They believed the school was aiding in a social transition that amounted to a form of medical and mental health treatment. When the district did not back down from its protocol, they sued the school committee, various officials, and teachers chiefly on the basis that the policy violated their parental rights as recognized by the Supreme Court under the 14th Amendment’s due process clause.

The parents lost in a federal district court, and with its decision this week, the 1st Circuit panel affirmed. The opinion was issued as a per curiam, meaning “by the court,” and not signed by a single author. The panel was made up of Judge O. Rogeriee Thompson, an appointee of President Barack Obama, and Judges Lara E. Montecalvo and Julie Rikelman, both appointees of President Joe Biden.

The court agreed that parents have a fundamental right in the upbringing of their children, based on Supreme Court decisions going back to the 1920s. That right encompasses education and medical care. But when it comes to the parents’ claims that the district’s gender transition protocol amounted to a form of medical intervention, the panel was dubious.

“We are unconvinced that merely alleging Ludlow’s use of gender-affirming pronouns or a gender-affirming name suffices to state a claim that the school provided medical treatment to the student,” the court said.

As for the parental rights claim in the educational context, the court rejected the parents’ arguments that discussing gender transition issues with their child and leaving it to the student to consent to parental notification had infringed on those rights.

“The Supreme Court has never suggested that parents have the right to control a school’s curricular or administrative decisions,” the appeals court said. “Rather, the court’s parental rights cases more essentially provide that the state cannot prevent parents from choosing a specific educational program.”

The panel went on to say, “To the extent the parents oppose certain academic assignments, the use of a student’s pronouns in the classroom, decisions about bathroom access, and a guidance counselor speaking to a student, none of those concerns restrict parental rights under the due-process clause.”

The court also rejected arguments that the district had deceived the parents by sometimes referring to the student as B.F. in front of them but using the student’s chosen name at school.

The district’s protocol “merely instructs teachers not to offer information—a student’s gender identity—without a student’s consent,” the court said, while the parents “remain free to strive to mold their child according to the parents’ own beliefs, whether through direct conversations, private educational institutions, religious programming, homeschooling, or other influential tools.”

Advocacy groups take an interest and file briefs

There was no immediate word on whether the decision would be appealed. The case drew numerous friend-of-the-court briefs from groups on both sides of the debate over gender identity issues in schools.

The Supreme Court has shown some interest in cases involving LGBTQ+ issues in schools. In December, three justices said they would have heard the appeal of a parents group that had challenged a Wisconsin school district’s gender support policy but lost in lower courts on procedural grounds. (Four justices’ votes are needed to grant review.)

Meanwhile, the high court will hear arguments, likely in April, over a Maryland school district’s refusal to allow parents with religious objections to opt their children out of lessons or other exposure to books dealing with LGBTQ+ themes.

Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative advocacy group that has been involved in battling pro-transgender school policies nationwide, said in its brief that “it is both possible and constitutionally required to find a solution to the challenges posed by competing views of sex and gender identity that respects the rights of parents, students, and teachers. Here, the challenged policy does not honor parents’ rights.”

The Massachusetts Association of School Superintendents, in a brief supporting the Ludlow school system that was written by the Boston-based advocacy group GLBTQ Legal Advocates and Defenders, said parents and schools are natural partners in supporting young people at school.

“However, as much as parents have rights to be involved in their child’s education, that is different from rigid requirements to disclose to parents matters about which the student is not yet ready to discuss at home,” the group said.

Events

Reading & Literacy K-12 Essentials Forum Supporting Struggling Readers in Middle and High School
Join this free virtual event to learn more about policy, data, research, and experiences around supporting older students who struggle to read.
School & District Management Webinar Squeeze More Learning Time Out of the School Day
Learn how to increase learning time for your students by identifying and minimizing classroom disruptions.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Webinar
Improve Reading Comprehension: Three Tools for Working Memory Challenges
Discover three working memory workarounds to help your students improve reading comprehension and empower them on their reading journey.
Content provided by Solution Tree

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Law & Courts Court Rejects Discipline of Student Whose Post Mocked George Floyd's Death
An appeals court ruled that a student's off-campus social media post is constitutionally protected.
4 min read
Illustration of the arm of Statue of Liberty with various speech bubbles coming out of the top of her torch
DigitalVision Vectors
Law & Courts Appeals Court Heightens Stakes Over Ten Commandments School Laws
A full federal appeals court will review Texas and Louisiana laws requiring Ten Commandments displays in schools.
2 min read
A copy of the Ten Commandments hangs alongside other historical documents at the Georgia Capitol on June 20, 2024, in Atlanta. Similar displays in schools are now at the center of court battles in Texas and Louisiana.
A copy of the Ten Commandments hangs alongside other historical documents at the Georgia Capitol on June 20, 2024, in Atlanta. Similar displays in schools are now at the center of court battles in Texas and Louisiana.
John Bazemore/AP
Law & Courts Ed. Dept. Can't Cancel Dozens of School Mental Health Grants, Judge Rules
The grants, valued at $1 billion, help schools employ more mental health professionals.
5 min read
Social worker Mary Schmauss, right, greets students as they arrive for school on Oct. 1, 2024, at Algodones Elementary School in Algodones, N.M.
A social worker greets students as they arrive for school on Oct. 1, 2024, at Algodones Elementary School in Algodones, N.M. A judge on Oct. 27 said the Trump administration couldn't cancel about four dozen mental health grants that funded school district hiring of school social workers, counselors, and psychologists to boost school mental health services.
Roberto E. Rosales/AP
Law & Courts Educational Toy Companies Lead Supreme Court Battle Over Trump Tariffs
Two Illinois family-owned educational toy companies are challenging the president’s tariff policies.
8 min read
Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog and Botley the Coding Robot (bottom right), two educational toys created by Learning Resources Inc.
Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog and Botley the Coding Robot (bottom right), two educational toys created by Learning Resources Inc. The Illinois company is one of two related educational toy makers challenging President Donald Trump’s tariffs before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Courtesy of Learning Resources