Two different strategies are being laid out when it comes to the sex education curriculum in Windsor-Essex.
At the local Catholic school board, Board Chair Barb Holland says it's "status quo."
She says students will continue to learn the "Fully Alive" program come September.
But at the local public school board, Chair Kim McKinley says the board is in a holding pattern and will wait and see what information comes down from the province.
Both chairs are commenting after the Ontario Public School Boards' Association stated it has yet to receive any direction from the province on the issue.
McKinley says it is possible the board could call a special meeting this summer to discuss the issue.
"Trustees do no meet until September at which time I'm sure if we haven't heard anything else by then we'll be asking of the director whether or not they've heard anything," she says. "But hopefully we will hear something before then."
Barb Holland says there won't be many changes in the curriculum at the local Catholic school board.
"We've been teaching Fully Alive for many many years and that's a program that we've written with the Ontario bishops and because so much of what the health curriculum asks us to contain, we already had it in our programming," she says. "So there was really not much for us to change or to have to add too."
Earlier this month, the Ford government scrapped the sex-education curriculum put in place by the Liberals.
The PC's have said students will learn the 2014 curriculum which was last updated in 1998.
The government also says it plans to consult with parents across the province on a new version of the curriculum.