Parents in one South Florida district have the right to request the preferred pronouns for their children to be called this school year — but teachers and school staff will have the right to say no. Transgender athletes in South Florida will be allowed to play on boys’ sports teams, but girls’ teams are off-limits. And teachers and school staff may have to out a gay or transgender child to their parents in some situations but may be able to stay quiet in others. The new set of rules, included in LGBTQ support guides released this past week for students in Broward and Palm Beach counties, are the school districts’ efforts to navigate through a rapidly changing landscape based on a series of new state laws, including one critics have dubbed “don’t say gay.” A spokesman for Miami-Dade didn’t confirm Friday whether that district has a similarly updated guide. A 2021-22 guide found online doesn’t address recently enacted laws. In the past two years, the state has passed laws that ban most instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity, ban transgender girls from competing on girls’ sports teams, require transgender students to use the bathroom that corresponds to their sex at birth, require schools to inform parents if a child receives counseling or other services related to being LGBTQ and ban schools from making school staff use a transgender child’s preferred pronoun. The Broward and Palm Beach guidebooks still allow students to dress in a way that affirms their identities and still allows students to form LGBTQ support clubs to meet on campus after school. But many of the other resources traditionally available for these students are now gone. Broward’s 101-page LGBTQ Support Guide has been replaced with an 18-page “Inclusive Schools Student Support Guide,” which references LGBTQ students as well as those with disabilities or from different religions or backgrounds. “There are maybe some students that don’t identify within [the LGBTQ] community that might also need support,” Broward Schools spokesman John Sullivan said. Palm Beach County’s LGBTQ+ Support Guide has shrunk from 105 pages last year to 11 this year. The old Palm Beach County guide gave tips for intercepting LGBTQ slurs.