Jersey’s current guidance requires teachers not to inform parents if a child begins using a different name or pronouns at school, unless the child consents. This is explicit in the guidance and has been publicly criticised for instructing teachers to use one set of pronouns with the child and a different set with parents.
In contrast, the Cass Review–aligned guidance in England takes the opposite approach: parents must be involved early, except in rare cases where there is a clear safeguarding risk from the parents themselves. The Cass framework emphasises that schools cannot socially transition a child without parental knowledge because doing so undermines safeguarding, transparency, and trust.
Jersey’s guidance treats a child’s change of name or pronouns as not a safeguarding concern in itself, and therefore not something parents need to be told about. This is stated directly in the guidance and has been widely reported.
Cass guidance, however, states that a request for social transition is a significant psychosocial event requiring a structured safeguarding response, multi‑disciplinary oversight, and parental involvement. It is not treated as a neutral or trivial matter.
Jersey’s guidance instructs teachers to use the child’s chosen pronouns in school, even if this means concealing that practice from parents by reverting to biological pronouns in parent communications. This creates a dual‑system of language that teachers must switch between.
Cass‑aligned guidance rejects this entirely. It states that schools should not create “dual realities” where a child is treated as one gender at school and another at home. It argues that such secrecy is harmful, destabilising, and places staff in impossible positions.
In conclusion...
Jersey's current school guidance diverges from the Cass Review by adopting a gender-affirmative model that treats social transition as a neutral event rather than a significant psychosocial development, neglecting the recommendation for early parental involvement. The policy promotes secrecy by allowing "dual realities," where preferred pronouns are used at school despite parental opposition, directly contradicting the Cass Review's finding that such practices are harmful to the child. Furthermore, while the Cass Review advises a cautious, holistic "watchful waiting" approach, the Jersey framework continues to prioritize immediate affirmation over comprehensive mental health assessment.
While the Education Minister, Rob Ward, claims he endorses the principles of watchful waiting in theory, opponents state the actual written guidance does not contain clear recommendations for teachers to practice it.
The Cass Review argues that social transition is not a neutral act but an "active intervention" with significant psychological consequences. While the Minister views "watchful waiting" as a rigid political doctrine, the Cass framework presents it as a developmentally appropriate clinical approach that avoids prematurely locking a child into a medical pathway.
During the 25 March 2026 States Assembly debate, Education Minister Deputy Rob Ward described the proposed guidance as an "externally-authored campaigning document" and a "political doctrine". Ward argued that this, and other similar, proposals to replace existing guidelines, prioritized a specific ideological approach over professional, child-centred safeguarding methods.
Dr. Cass has consistently maintained that her review is an evidence-based clinical evaluation and has criticized the "toxic" nature of the debate that rebrands standard psychological support as a form of harm or "conversion therapy". It seems it is the Minister who is advocating a political doctrine.
While the Minister prioritizes the child's expressed identity under the UNCRC, Cass cautions that children often experience gender distress alongside other complex issues like autism, neurodiversity, or trauma. Simply affirming a child’s self-identification without a broader holistic assessment is a failure of clinical and safeguarding duties.
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