They are disproportionately harassed, and few teachers are trained to help.
10/18/2016
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When Salem Whit walked
through the hallways of their high school in Spring Grove, Pennsylvania,
overhearing classmates ask one another, “What is that thing?” happened
with nearly enough frequency to become background noise. Unlike the
sound of lockers slamming, however, comments about Salem’s gender
identity were too targeted for the teen to treat them as white noise. “I
actually thought I was inhuman,” Salem recalled when thinking about the
years of bullying and harassment they experienced in high school. “I
thought I was an alien. I definitely thought I was going to hell.”
Salem
graduated from high school in 2015 but says the process of getting to
that point was far from easy. “I’m not sure how my grades were good
enough to graduate,” the 19-year-old explained. After years of
experiencing gender dysphoria—feeling an intense and innate disconnect
from their body, gender presentation, voice, and name—Salem came out as
transgender during their senior year of high school. More specifically,
Salem identifies as both non-binary and agender, meaning that while
Salem does not identify with the female sex they were assigned at birth,
they also do not identify as male or use male pronouns.
As classmates and teachers
struggled to use Salem’s preferred pronouns and accept their gender
presentation, however, the high-schooler found that the greatest relief
came from avoiding school altogether. “I skipped classes,” they
admitted. “I quit every extracurricular. I stopped participating in
sports, gym, and drama—anything that separated us by gender. I even
stopped talking for a while, because my gender dysphoria caused me to
really hate the sound of my own voice.” At 16, feeling lost and lonely,
Salem attempted suicide.
Disturbingly,
Salem’s story is more common than not among youth who identify as LGBT.
According to the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network’s new report,
“Teasing to Torment: School Climate Revisited,” LGBT youth in middle
and high school have lower grades, more attendance problems, and are
less likely to complete high school than their heterosexual and
cisgender peers. Many experience long-term emotional effects from the
bullying, harassment, and anti-LGBT bias they face as students. Life may
have gotten better for many in the LGBT community in the last decade,
but for LGBT youth in middle and high school, there is much room for
improvement.
Teachers play an important yet
under-discussed role when it comes to anti-LGBT bias and bullying in
schools. Youth often seek out teachers, coaches, and other
administrators for support when it may lack at home or in their
communities. Many LGBT students, however, need staff who are not only
supportive of LGBT people, but are also prepared to deal with the
complex and diverse issues that the community experiences. As GLSEN’s
report demonstrates, few in the school system feel equipped to handle
these scenarios, suggesting that training and development for teachers
and staff on LGBT-specific topics may be a necessity to provide equal
safety and support for LGBT youth.
GLSEN
conducted the study through online surveys among 1,367 middle- and
high-school students between the ages of 13 and 18 nationwide. GLSEN
also surveyed 10,015 secondary-school teachers. This report examines the
current climate of schools for LGBT youth one decade after GLSEN’s
original report
was released in 2005. GLSEN’s original report was the first nationwide
survey that examined the differences in experience between LGBT and
non-LGBT youth in schools.
Since 2005,
the LGBT community has seen a lot of progress, including marriage
equality and advancements in employment protections, and researchers
this time around were hopeful to find that school climates improved for
LGBT youth as well. “Society has changed in many positive ways, and we
assumed schools would follow suit. With this report, we wanted to get a
snapshot of how LGBT students are doing in schools today,” Greytak said.
While the 2015 report shows
minor, gradual improvements have occurred for LGBT youth in schools
over the last 10 years, heterosexual and cisgender students still
experience less victimization and better grades and are more hopeful
about their futures than their LGBT counterparts. The challenges faced
by LGBT youth in school can have long-term consequences.
According
to GLSEN’s latest findings, LGBT secondary-school students experience
higher rates of bullying based on not only their sexual orientation and
gender identity, but also their appearance and body size. They’re also
more likely to experience sexual harassment, cyberbullying, and property
damage, among other forms of intimidation and abuse.
“We
see that LGBT youth are being deprived of an equal education based on
these hostile school climates,” Greytak said. According to GLSEN’s
report, LGBT students are three times as likely than their non-LGBT
peers to report they do not plan on completing high school, and twice as
likely to have skipped school in the past month as a result of feeling
unsafe or uncomfortable around their peers.
For
Cara Donovan, now 24, skipping school became her only defense against
rumors about her sexual orientation. Once a high-achieving student, Cara
came close to failing three classes during her sophomore year of high
school when the bullying and rumors were at their worst. Cara’s
attendance and grades plummeted at the height of her bullying; she
skipped 28 days her freshman year, 25 her sophomore year, 18 as a
junior, and “only” 13 as a senior. As she explained in an interview,
Cara’s bullies were mostly upperclassmen, and when they graduated, the
rumors left with them. When those bullies left, however, things didn’t
get much better: “I went back to hiding and ignoring my identity,” she
explained.
At
the age of 15, Cara began dating a female classmate at her high
school—a relationship that lasted about six months and was marked by a
sense of isolation and self-hatred. “I completely repressed it,” she
said. “I hated myself so much that I couldn't talk about it, and I would
have panic attacks if people brought it up.” Forgetting her first love
has been a way of healing from the trauma and anti-LGBT bullying she
faced from her peers. Cara had no access to a Gay Straight Alliance and
never discussed LGBT themes, history, or people in her classes. What
Cara did hear came from her classmates. “I remember walking into
softball practice and hearing some girls whispering about me that I was
gay. Before the softball team was a type of family. But after the rumors
started, I would receive shady looks and some of the other players
stopped speaking to me,” she said. “I started to think there was
something really wrong with me … I wasn't normal.”
Now,
Cara still struggles to feel comfortable with her sexual orientation.
“I was uncomfortable then,” Cara said, “and maybe still am.”
According
to GLSEN’s report, half of teachers surveyed said that they haven’t
done anything to support LGBT youth at their schools. In fact, teachers
reported feeling the least comfortable dealing with LGBT students who’d
been subject to harassment and assault; they were much more comfortable
addressing those problems when they involved ability, sexism, and race.
Nearly all teachers—83 percent—reported believing that they
have a responsibility to ensure a safe learning environment for LGBT
students. The disconnect between what teachers believe is their duty and
what they feel comfortable acting on may come down to training and
preparation, Greytak suggested.
Less than a third
of teachers reported receiving training on LGBT issues, and less than a
quarter receive training on transgender issues. While all sexual
minorities are vulnerable, transgender youth often face additional
barriers. According to the National Center for Transgender Equality,
more than 75 percent of transgender youth report
feeling unsafe at school, and 59 percent were denied access to
restrooms consistent with their gender identity; those who do persevere
through school also have significantly lower grades.
For
Salem, navigating life as teen who did not fit society’s traditional
notions of sex and gender required them to rely on hope and judgment
each time they came out about their gender identity. “Teachers were hard
to read,” they explained. “Some of them did use my preferred name and
pronouns, which meant a lot to me. Others avoided using pronouns at all,
which was at least better than being misgendered.”
Salem
notes, too, that policies can push teachers into tricky situations.
“Partway through my senior year, teachers were told that they had to
call us [transgender students] by our assigned names.” As Salem
remembers the policy, “the exception was if the student's guardian would
come to school to sign a paper about our names.”
But “few of us had someone supportive enough to sign it,” Salem continued. “So I never really felt safe at school.”
GLSEN’s
report suggests that including LGBT history and issues into curricula
may have a significant impact on the experience of LGBT students. LGBT
students who were taught about LGBT people, history, or events in any of
their classes reported experiencing lower levels of victimization. At
the time of the study, however, only 20 percent of students reported
learning about LGBT topics in any of their classes.
As early as middle
school, Queen contemplated suicide. “I felt very, very empty,” she
recalled. “I was lonely every day.” Queen acknowledges that she still
struggles with feelings of depression and emptiness but uses her own
experiences to motivate her to aid others who are struggling. “On days I
am really sad, I give myself five minutes to cry,” she explained. “Then
I make myself do something proactive for the community. If I can help
even one person accept themselves, then I know I’ve made a difference.”
Luckily,
Queen has supportive parents, and although she has nearly three years
of high school left, she feels confident that her school and community
are moving in the right direction for their LGBT youth. “We get to talk
about LGBT issues in class,” Queen explains. “We can choose to do
projects on topics like same-sex adoption or same-sex marriage which
really helps normalize it.” In the coming years, Queen hopes to see even
more inclusivity in the classroom, including LGBT-specific sexual
education and discussion of gender dysphoria.
Greytak
stressed that comprehensive preparation and education on LGBT topics
should be built into every educator’s training. “The Constitution
guarantees all students, including LGBT students, access to safe and
equal education,” she said. “But right now, LGBT students across the
country are deprived of equal learning. Even though it is 2016, it is
not an equal playing field for all students. We must keep working to
educate and protect LGBT youth in our schools.”
Read more articles from The Atlantic, here.
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