Bavaria’s Prime Minister Markus Söder wants to ban gender in schools in his state. ZDF presenter Markus Lanz now wanted to know why.
No gendering in Bavarian authorities and schools – that’s what Prime Minister Markus Söder wants to implement in his state. “With us there will be no mandatory gendering”said the CSU boss on Tuesday. In the ZDF talk show, the presenter Markus Lanz asked Söder a spicy question. What threatens that? “Teacher who changed the morning with an oat milk cappuccino”? Söder initially evaded the idea of speaking outside the classroom as he pleased, but then added: “The question is whether it is taught” and whether students’ grades depended on it. Bavaria’s Prime Minister said it couldn’t be the case that students who don’t gender themselves would be rated worse.
There is also a reason why a majority of Germans reject gender, said Söder, citing a current survey by the opinion research institute Civey. According to this, 80 percent of Germans reject gender stars and the like. A Forsa survey in the summer of 2023 revealed something similar. At the time, almost three quarters of Germans were annoyed by gender, and the majority advocated a ban on gender in administration.
Söder expressed understanding for the rejection and added: “I think it’s divisive, this exaggerated gendering.”
Markus Söder is not alone with the gender ban in schools
Markus Söder is not the first to publicly criticize gender. Internal I, underscore, gender asterisks and the like are a topic that is always controversially discussed across the country. Söder recently accused the traffic light government of going overboard with projects such as gender. “A little more reason and common sense would be good for everyone in Berlin”said the Bavarian Prime Minister at Lanz, referring to the traffic light government.
Bavaria would not be the first federal state where gender in schools has a difficult time. In Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt, corresponding language regulations in schools are also rejected. Instead, gender-neutral couple forms are recommended. Gendering in essays is seen as a mistake by Saxon teachers. In Saxony-Anhalt there is more leeway in the assessment. Gender asterisks etc. are still banned in schools.
There are no gender bans in North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg. However, the Ministry of Education in Düsseldorf refers to guidelines according to which gender-appropriate language must generally be used. This should be formulated gender-neutrally or in pairs, i.e. female and male. Baden-Württemberg’s Prime Minister Winfried Kretschmann also doesn’t believe in gender in the classroom. However, the assessment and correction guidelines in his federal state do not contain any requirements for this.
The German Teachers’ Association, meanwhile, rejects gendering by teachers. Teachers should be in class “Adhere to the official regulations and refrain from writing anything that is not intended”said the President of the German Teachers’ Association, Heinz-Peter Meidinger, to the German Press Agency in April. With students, however, they should “tolerant and reserved” be if these are in essays and exams “unofficial gender spellings” used.
Sources: , DPA
Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.