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August 10, 2012

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US school's U-turn on kicking out pregnant pupils

A UNITED States school is changing a policy that kicked pregnant students out of class and required them to be taught at home.

No one at Delhi Charter School in rural Louisiana realized there was anything wrong with the policy until the American Civil Liberties Union's state chapter threatened to sue, said chairman Albert Christman.

The policy has gotten "everybody up in a roar," he said.

The school required students who were suspected of being pregnant to take a pregnancy test. If they refused, or tested positive, they had to be home-schooled. The ACLU said the policy violated Title IX of the 1972 federal education law, which requires equal opportunities for both sexes.

Too many schools do not realize pregnant students should receive equal treatment, the National Women's Law Center said in a June report.

"Despite enormous advances for women and girls in education since 1972, schools across the country continue to bar pregnant and parenting students from activities, kick them out of school, pressure them to attend alternative programs, and penalize them for pregnancy-related absences," the law center said in the report.

Louisiana Department of Education spokesman Barry Landry said he did not know the state's policies for pregnant students or whether they apply to private and religious schools getting tuition vouchers

Fatima Goss Graves, vice president for education and employment at the nonprofit law center, said it gets several calls a month from school and college students who are pregnant or have children and are having trouble with their schools. Many of those problems are corrected just by telling students their rights and explaining how to negotiate with administrators.

Goss Graves said she had never seen a school policy "that said you must take a pregnancy test in order to attend school. Or one that pushes students out."

Christman, the Delhi school board chairman, said "just a handful" of students were affected by the policy, which dates back to 2006.





 

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