The Queering Education Research Institute© (QuERI)


2010-2011


An Exploration of Heternormativity in Sex Education Curricula

Katherine Seiger

Paper Title: An Exploration of Heternormativity in Sex Education Curricula

Abstract: Between 2000 and 2009, conservative US government control over sex education dramatically increased. This control can be categorized into three areas: control over dissemination of sex and sexuality information; control of federal funding for sexuality education and research (Irvine, 2004) and control over what “counts” as legitimate sexual expression: heterosexual intercourse. From 1988 to 2003 the percentage of public school teachers utilizing abstinence only curriculum with no information on condoms or contraception escalated 28% (Irvine, 2004), and in 2003 the National Institutes of Health increased scrutiny of federally funded research around same-sex sexual behaviors and HIV prevention in response to conservative claims that these were a “waste” of public funding. This cultural re-entrenchment in heteronormative sexuality further distanced LGBTQ youth from the possibility of comprehensive, accurate, non-stigmatizing sexual education. Continuing to the present, the United States has seen a consistent rise in the number of HIV and STI cases in youth—the largest concentration in young men who have sex with men. In an effort to better understand the heteronorms that inform sex education, four popular curricula were explored using textual analysis. The review suggests that heteronormative messages and assumptions underlying sexuality education impede efforts to empower youth sexual health in general, and LGBTQ identifying youth sexual health specifically. Furthermore, both gendered messages and fear tactics serve to marginalize and disengage LGBTQ youth. Implications for development of an LGBTQ youth affirming curricula are discussed.


Safety and Gay Day: The Limits of Safe Schools and Inclusion Discourses in Creating Affirming Environments for LGBTQ Students

Elizabethe Payne & Melissa Smith

Paper Title: Safety and Gay Day: The Limits of Safe Schools and Inclusion Discourses in Creating Affirming Environments for LGBTQ Students.

Abstract: Research has explored multicultural teacher education from multiple, sometimes divergent perspectives, yet these studies agree that what passes for multicultural teacher preparation is often “ not multicultural at all” and retains a focus on “celebrating diversity or understanding the cultural  ‘other’ rather than a commitment to educational equity” (Gorski, 2009, p. 309). Interviews conducted with RSIS participants indicate that though the training utilizes a critical approach, what teachers embraced from the workshop was a call to understand and “protect” students harassed for gender or sexual identities through the “safety” discourse –a form of understanding and valuing the “cultural other”—and an investment in one time visibility events like participation in the annual Day of Silence as a symbol of improved school climate.  Additionally, we found that educators frame LGBTQ issues as “risk” issues rather than as equity issues. These frames of thinking – safety from bullying; noting days of recognition highlighting school bullying and silencing, disease, and murder; and grouping LGBTQ issues with risky behaviors—continue to mark LGBTQ students as “victims” or “problems” in need of saving or solving.  We posit that participant responses to the RSIS workshop content reflect educators’ understanding of their obligation to “diversity” as presented during their teacher preparation programs and that workshop content which resonated with them was that which they could easily fit into these familiar frameworks.


No ‘Gay’ Left Behind: Exploring Multiple Points of Exclusion and Possibilities for Change in the School Lives of LGBTQ Youth

Panel Title: No ‘Gay’ Left Behind: Exploring Multiple Points of Exclusion and Possibilities for Change in the School Lives of LGBTQ Youth, American Education Studies Association (AESA), Denver, CO: 2010

Abstract: For LGBTQ students, school can be a battleground where attempts to define themselves—through dating, academic work, or experimentation with self-expression—are regulated by cultural systems that stigmatize identities that transgress hegemonic gender norms.  The social scene, curriculum, extra curricular activities and policy all contribute to school climates where “successful” performance of masculinity and femininity are rewarded and non-conformity is punished through silencing and exclusion.  This panel aims to explore the complicated problem of creating more affirming environments for LGBTQ students by examining sites in which LGBTQ identities continue to be marginalized—sex education curriculum—as well as avenues for possible change—teacher training and policy reform.  Collectively, these papers address the need to expand the definition of the “problem” of unsupportive schools beyond issues of violence and discrimination and toward comprehensive understanding of the cultural systems that persistently marginalize LGBTQ youth.


Policy as protection: A qualitative examination of school policy as a tool to support LGBTQ youth

Rebecca Johnson, Melissa Smith & Elizabethe Payne

Paper Title: Policy as Protection?: An analysis of school policy in a district sued for failing to protect a student harassed for his gender and sexual identity.

Abstract: Increasingly, efforts to improve school climate for LGBTQ students are turning to legislation, policy, and litigation. Researchers have asserted that in order to disrupt patterns of harassment, schools need “clear, comprehensive, and accessible…policies” that clearly communicate to the entire school community that LGBT students are afforded the same protections as their peers (Anagnostopoulos et al, 2009).  However, inclusive policy does not equate to inclusive school culture, and policy without commitment to communication and enforcement is ineffective. This paper explores the limitations of policy and litigation as illuminated by a 2009 school harassment case in Upstate New York. We outline the inconsistencies and ambiguities in the school’s anti-discrimination policies and examine these policies alongside parent and student affidavits which indicate school officials did very little to disrupt the pattern of abuse. The administration’s reported indifference to the policies—which included sexual orientation—was central in supporting a school climate that actively tolerated LGBT harassment. In summary, the larger issues of legislation, litigation, and inclusive policy as tools for improving school climate for LGBT students are explored.