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Things are changing in the right direction for LGBT kids—but not fast enough, as a new report makes plain.
09.27.16
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According to a comprehensive new report from the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network,
several key measures of anti-LGBT bullying in U.S. secondary schools
fell by less than 2 percent per year between 2005 and 2015. The
situation for LGBT students may be “gradually improving,” the report
states, but it “remains troublesome.”
In 2005, when GLSEN conducted its first “From Teasing to Torment” national survey,
nearly 62 percent of U.S. middle and high schoolers reported students
at their schools were victimized based on sexual orientation. In 2015,
when GLSEN collected data for this followup report, that figure was
still just shy of 50 percent.
Other
decreases in anti-LGBT bullying were similarly gradual. From 2005 to
2015, the percentage of students who reported witnessing victimization
based on gender expression fell from 60 to 49 percent, and the
percentage who reported hearing the word “gay” used in a derogatory
fashion dropped slightly, from 89 percent to 75 percent.
Even more disturbing is the fact
that race-based victimization remained flat, with nearly 38 percent of
students reporting it 10 years apart.
“Overall, bullying still persists
at unacceptable levels, and the gains of the past 10 years throw the
more intractable aspects of the problem into higher relief,” GLSEN
Executive Director Eliza Byrd wrote in the report’s introduction.
This slow pace of change for LGBT students
is especially disappointing when offset against the rapid gains their
adult peers have made over the same time period. In 2005, same-sex
marriage was legal in one state. By June 2015, it was legal in all 50. In 2005, the military still followed “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” Now, LGBT people can serve openly in every branch of the armed forces.
But these sweeping victories have not erased the deep-set cultural biases that exact a special toll on LGBT youth.
According
to GLSEN’s report, which was based a Harris Poll survey of nearly 1,400
students and more than 1,000 teachers, LGBT secondary-school students
still deal with considerable prejudice in the classroom. Over half of
middle and high schoolers said they still heard their peers use phrases
like “that’s so gay” either “often” or “very often.” Over 40 percent
said they heard slurs like “faggot” or “dyke” used just as frequently.
Fifteen
percent of the students surveyed even said teachers and administrators
were making homophobic comments. Nearly 13 percent reported hearing
“negative remarks about transgender people” from school staff. And less
than 20 percent said staff intervened “often” when they heard negative
remarks about gender expression, which is especially concerning given
that nearly a quarter of the students polled did not identify in a
strictly gender-conforming way.
“You would probably expect peers to
behave in a way that’s biased toward LGBT students, but to see it from
teachers? We found [that] quite troubling,” GLSEN researcher Christian
Villenas told The Daily Beast.
According to Villenas, schools can
be “some of the last places to change” on LGBT issues, in part because
some parents still have hang-ups about inclusion in educational
settings. A 2016 GLAAD report
found that 29 percent of non-LGBT adults would feel uncomfortable
knowing that their child had an LGBT teacher and 37 percent would feel
discomfort if their child “had a lesson on LGBT history in their
school.”
“There might be a limit in terms of
what society says they can support,” Villenas told The Daily Beast.
“They can support something like gay marriage, but when it comes to LGBT
issues in schools and dealing with young people, that may be where
certain people draw the line.”
And for anyone inclined to believe
that bullying helps prepare LGBT students for the “real world,” the
GLSEN data tell a much different story.
Almost 10 percent of LGBT students
in the survey sample said they didn’t plan to go to college as compared
to just 6 percent of non-LGBT students. Over three times as many LGBT as
non-LGBT students said they didn’t “even plan to finish high school”
(2.7 versus 0.8 percent) and over six times as many gender
non-conforming students as gender-conforming students said the same (3.1
versus 0.5 percent).
“What our research shows is that
[bullying] doesn’t toughen you up and get you ready for the ‘real
world,’” said Villenas. “It actually leads to poor psychological
outcomes. It leads to lower educational aspirations. It leads to more
likely experiences with school discipline and higher absenteeism. We see
no evidence here that it prepares students for the ‘real world’ or for
college. Quite the opposite, actually.”
The new GLSEN report isn’t all doom
and gloom, however. For one, the percentage of students who reported
having access to a gay-straight alliance (GSA) rose from 21.2 percent in
2005 to 35.8 percent in 2015, with research showing that GSAs are
“related to greater feelings of safety for the general student body,
with an even greater improvement in safety for LGBTQ students
specifically.” An impressive 82 percent of middle and high school
students also reported knowing an LGBT person, and those students had
“less negative attitudes toward LGBT people” than their peers. And
overall, most middle and high school students—nine out of 10—still
reported feeling safe at school.
But as Villenas told The Daily Beast, “There’s a lot left that needs to be done.”
Less than 60 percent of
schools, for example, have anti-bullying policies that specifically
include sexual orientation and gender identity. Last summer,
incidentally, the U.S. Senate voted down an amendment to the Every Child Achieves Act that would have prohibited anti-LGBT bullying in all public schools nationwide.
But the most worrying trend GLSEN found is that teachers were less
comfortable intervening upon hearing a biased comment in 2015 than they
were in 2005. That may be because less than a third of them have “ever
had any professional development on LGB student issues,” and less than a
quarter have been trained on issues affecting transgender students, even as school districts become embroiled in restroom debates.
“Although teachers overwhelmingly
endorsed the idea that they have an obligation to ensure safe and
supportive schools for LGBT students, when it came to taking action to
do so, many seemed to struggle,” the report stated.
GLSEN’s
report wraps up with several recommendations for schools that
ultimately boil down to one principle: Do more of the things that help
students feel safe. That means creating GSAs, teaching LGBT-inclusive
history lessons, instituting more comprehensive anti-bullying policies,
and requiring professional development for school staff.
Because ultimately—while life may indeed get better for some LGBT teenagers after graduation, as Savage promised—it’s not getting better for LGBT students fast enough.
Read more articles from The Daily Beast, here.
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