Oregon school survey asks 11-year-olds if they’re ‘two spirit,’ ‘genderfluid’

Oregon officials are facing a firestorm of outrage over intrusive, age-inappropriate, far-left sexual ideology in surveys of schoolchildren there.

A new student health survey created by the…

Oregon officials are facing a firestorm of outrage over intrusive, age-inappropriate, far-left sexual ideology in surveys of schoolchildren there.

A new student health survey created by the Oregon Health Authority asks 6th-graders to choose from a long list of gender and sexuality labels for themselves, including “Two Spirit,” “Demigirl,” “Genderfluid” and “Agender.” 

The survey, aimed at children as young as 11, even allows students to select multiple identities.

The agency claims its survey helps show where students “are doing well and where they may be struggling and need some help to succeed.” 

But parents who reviewed the survey – many of whom say they were never apprised of it – say the questions go far beyond basic health and extend into topics many families firmly believe should remain within the home. 

Portland area father Chuck Gonzales said he only saw it after finding information online. 

“I was made aware of this survey somehow online,” he told LifeSiteNews, noting it was given to students in the 6th, 8th and 11th grades. The list of labels, he said, “asks a lot of really confusing things to 6th-graders.” 

Gonzales said he checked the state’s website to confirm what he saw. 

“When I heard about this, I went to the website, downloaded the PDF form, and sure enough, it was just right there,” he said. 

District officials insist parents received notification about the survey. 

Hillsboro School District communications officer Beth Graser told Fox News, “Every parent/guardian received advance information about this survey in two ways: through our ParentSquare communication system and via hard copy that was sent home with students.” 

Gonzales disputes the effectiveness of this process. He said many families around him had no idea the survey was coming. 

“None of the parents that I had spoken with or comments online had heard anything about it,” he said. He said some even thought the form was “made up and ridiculous” until he shared the link. 

Graser said Gonzales’s son was opted out properly and did not take the survey. Still, Gonzales argues the content is inappropriate for any young student. 

“It is infuriating that the government, the state of Oregon, and these liberal progressives down in Salem can think that they can go into the bedrooms of our children and ask them about things they have no clue about,” he said. 

He added his son “knew that it was weird and sick and gross.”