Woodstock — Unlike schools in Windsor and Lebanon, the Woodstock Elementary School has not yet administered a controversial sex-related survey to students.

School officials in Woodstock, one of three communities in the Upper Valley that have agreed to participate in an evaluation of WISE’s Youth Violence Prevention Program, will review the revised content of the WISE survey to determine if the survey is developmentally appropriate for fifth- and sixth-grade students, Windsor Central Supervisory Union Superintendent Mary Beth Banios said in a Tuesday email.

“If it is deemed to be appropriate, then parents will be informed when it will be administered and given the opportunity to have their child opt out if they so choose,” Banios wrote. “We believe that the data from a developmentally appropriate survey can help us be more responsive to the social-emotional needs of our students.”

The survey, which included questions related to gender identity, sexual attraction and romantic relationships, drew criticism from parents in Windsor after it was administered to one class of fifth-graders earlier this fall. There was no such outcry in Lebanon, where parents were offered an opt-in option, rather than the opt-out option used in the Vermont schools.

No timeline has been set for when the review of the revised survey will take place, Banios said in her email.