Revisiting Past Experiences of LGBTQ+-Identifying Students: An Analysis Framed by the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. SDG3, SDG5, and SDG10 and Their Relation to Inclusive and Equitable Quality Education for LGBTQ+ Students
1.2. The Study Context
…not all teachers act in situations of harassment occurring in the school. Most teachers reported that they had heard homophobic discourses and indicated that support for sexual minority students was not available. Some refer to the fact that they do not have adequate training, others do not know how to act in such situations, but a large percentage gives no reason for why they do not intervene. This leads us to wonder whether the reasons and their role in these situations have never been raised. Training policies should therefore remedy this omission by designing actions to address teachers’ passivity to LGBTphobia, because it is crucial to develop a safe environment for these young people.(p. 2445)
1.3. The Present Study
2. Methodology
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection, Instrument and Analyses
3. Results
3.1. SDG3 (Good Health and Well-Being)
So, I changed schools in year 3, because it was unbearable. They didn’t do anything to help us at that school. It was awful. In fact, I didn’t want to go out to recess at break time. I told my teacher and he said stuff like, “Well, today they’re picking on you but tomorrow they’ll move on to someone else”. And there was a German language teacher who wasn’t even my teacher but was supervising at recess time, and she let me and another girl who was being bullied go to her office, because she was a nice person and didn’t know what else to do. She knew that no one would help her [help us], so that’s what she did with students who didn’t feel comfortable. But she was the only one who… oh, and the conserge [man who worked at the front desk] but the other teachers [did nothing]. We spoke to the headteachers but nothing was done. The year I left, five people out of two classes left because we couldn’t take any more.
There was a teacher when I was in my second year of bachillerato [final university track years of secondary school] who made it very clear that she was very open and that we could go and talk to her if we wanted (Alba).
[My assigned mentors 1] were always willing to have sessions to support us and, when we had a problem, they suggested that we speak directly to the headteacher. They were always willing to help us. I think there could have been more general awareness in the school, rather than depending on the [luck of which] class group [you were in] (In Spanish high schools, students are often placed in stable class groupings who do not change in composition except for elective courses, see [41]. These classes are assigned a stable mentor with whom parents communicate if need be). I mean, they should have made it general school policy, instead of [this support] being based on the personal relationship of teacher X with class X (Arnau).
For example, we were in class and, you know… someone said, ‘Well, she’s not really a woman, she’s a dyke’. And none of the teachers said anything. Nothing happened to them. And I couldn’t believe it was really happening and no one was doing anything. I just remember losing it. I started to say, how can you say that? But the teacher just stood at the whiteboard, completely silent, without saying a word. I thought, this is awful, so much needs to change… I don’t know. It was intense.
I remember thinking about it and telling myself maybe it wasn’t true, maybe I was lying to myself. Now I think about it, it doesn’t make any sense… maybe I was bisexual or something. I remember hearing a voice in my head that told me I was just doing it for attention, but of course I hadn’t told anyone so how could I have been doing it for attention? But I said to myself, I only see things like this online, but I shouldn’t rely on the Internet. I have to trust what my teachers say, and my parents and so on, but especially teachers. They’re not saying anything about it, so I must be making it up, it can’t be right, what I am thinking? And sometimes I had a hard time because I doubted myself and then I thought, well if I’m doubting myself, what will others think if I tell them?
I think I am a quote unquote an exception, because I was really lucky to go to my high school where everyone was really open…all of my classmates that went to high school with me currently identify in some way with the [LGBTQ+] community…in this way, I mean, I think I was lucky.
At [my] high school girls walk out of school holding hands, kiss each other, and it is totally normalized. At school it is normal, especially thanks to TV series like Élite(The TV series that Jana refers to here is a Spanish Netflix series that focuses on various storylines of LGBTQ+ characters, prominently featuring a homosexual relationship between characters of acutely differing class and religious backgrounds), etc., that normalize it. I think that in this sense we have advanced a lot.
I was in the artistic batxillerat [university track], and everyone was very openminded… and almost all of us were practically bisexuals in the class, and there were 16 of us. It was the most normal thing in the world. I never had any problem.
3.2. SDG3 (Reduced Inequalities)
My primary school was actually in a part of the Eixample [a centric Barcelona neighborhood] they call the Gaixample, because it’s full of gay bars and nightclubs, but we never talked about it. I remember there was a conserge [person that works at the entrance a school] …we thought he was gay, so we had the typical impressions of 7-year-old kids, and the teachers were fully aware of that, but it was never addressed, it was like whenever we started talking about it in front of the teachers, they made us change the subject, as if it was taboo. So, no, it wasn’t talked about among the kids or among the teachers.
Those issues were mostly covered in citizenship class in ESO [the first four years of high school], when we talked a bit about feminism, racism, etc. Once they played a monologue of an LGBT person … but they just put a video on and that was that, job done (Albert).
But in history and stuff we didn’t study any figure who… no… I mean, if there was anyone who openly identified as LGBTQ+, we never discussed it in class, maybe they said it as a kind of fun fact, but it was like… it was nothing to do with how it had affected their thinking or actions (Clàudia).
Nothing about sexual orientation or gender identity or anything like that was ever discussed. Maybe there was the odd debate in philosophy, or maybe in ethics or citizenship, subjects like that, but they were one-off situations. It was stuff like what is pride month like, let’s do a class about it. And then it wasn’t mentioned again for the rest of the year (Estela).
No, in fact, there’s a really lovely subject called ethics, but they don’t make the most of it. It’s like… it’s just there to tick a box and then it’s like bye, see you later… and I think a subject called ethics could be used to address these issues, but it’s just not the case (Martina).
I was told about Plato in ethics. It was like “introduction to philosophy”. I mean nothing to do with ethics or, I don’t know, modern society or anything. No, they told me about Plato. Or how if you saw an older person on the street, you could ask him if he needed help crossing. So those issues weren’t raised in those classes either, you know? (Aina).
In citizenship class, we watched films about how to carry out good deeds, help older people cross the road, stuff like that. And you think, well, maybe they could use some of that time, or in our mentoring classes, when the mentor is supposed to establish a relationship and turn it into a safe space, but then he uses the time to go over Section X of the maths textbook because we ran out of time in maths class. So that time is used to catch up with other stuff because otherwise they won’t get finished by the end of the year. So, there is time, but I don’t think it’s used properly. It’s badly managed (Martí).
Honestly, hmm, I don’t remember [LGBTQ+ content integration in high school], I would say no. But what is true is that I did my final year research project on adoption by homosexual couples…it was very well-received. I was really surprised because in the beginning I was embarrassed, but in the end, I came out [of the experience] very happy because of the response, both that of students as well as teachers.
At our graduation from batxillerat [university-track high school], the school assigned you a partner, obviously, heterosexual, girl-boy. So, we wanted to walk together because we were really excited about this. We commented it to one of the headteachers, who was in charge, and she told us we were just saying [that we were girlfriends] because we didn’t want to walk with who we were assigned, that it was obvious that we were pulling her leg, that when a person is a lesbian you can tell, and with us it wasn’t evident. And she knew that we were doing this because we didn’t want to walk with the boys.
3.3. SDG5 (Gender Equality)
Well, the guys who were more quote unquote effeminate, shall we say, got called names like ‘faggot’ or whatever… Or there were times when someone new came to class and said something to me without being aware my sexual orientation. But I’ve never had a problem. Some people in my class did have problems, though, especially boys who didn’t identify as gay but behaved in a way that was associated with being homosexual. They got quite a lot of comments and to be honest they were pretty derogatory.
I think they left me alone because there’s always a kind of sexualization with bisexual women… They think, wow, she likes men… well, at that time it was men and women, of course, and it’s taken for granted that bisexuals only like men and women. And they were like, ‘Wow, I can have something with this girl and another [girl]’, you know? I think that’s why I didn’t get bullied in that way, because they thought, ‘Oh well, she likes girls, the same as me’.
I think that sexual orientation is more normalized, shall we say, and it’s something that also maybe doesn’t affect others. It’s a case of, you come out of the closet and that’s that. You get on with your life. But with trans issues and gender identity, since you actually have to change as a person, with different pronouns and everything… They struggle more and it’s treated as more of a taboo.
Yeah, people who identified as gay men received virtually no support, but at the same time they also received the most support, because the others [other LGBTQ+ students that were not homosexual males] were treated like they didn’t even exist.
We had an art history teacher who actually retired that year, so I mean she wasn’t exactly young. She always told us all this stuff about the artists. She got a kick out of it because teenagers find it very funny. She’d tell us about how Van Gogh was gay and how he was involved with Gauguin. Sometimes she mentioned it in the usual way you talk about the life of an artist, like ‘he was married and had three children’, but instead, ‘he had three lovers and two of them were men’ and that was it.
Only a mention was made when we were studying the Ancient World that relations between men were frequent. Especially when talking about Sparta and Athens.
They talked to us about aspects related to HIV, but always from a gay perspective: male-male. The homosexual relations were catalogues as male-male and not female-female.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
4.1. A Need for High Quality Teacher Pre-Service Education and In-Service Educational Leadership Programs Focused on LGBTQ+ Equity and Inclusivity
4.2. Policy Changes
4.3. Study Limitations
4.4. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Data Collection Type * | Pseudonym | Self-Identification | Openly-Identified as LGBTQ+ during High School | Openly-Identified as LGBTQ+ after High School |
---|---|---|---|---|
Interviews | Alba | Bisexual | ✓ | |
Albert | Gay | ✓ | ||
Alfred | Gay | ✓ | ||
Anna | Bisexual | ✓ | ||
Arnau | Gay | ✓ | ||
Clàudia | No specific identification | ✓ | ||
Coral | Bisexual | ✓ | ||
Cristina | Bisexual | ✓ | ||
Dani | Gay | ✓ | ||
Estela | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Ester | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Iris | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Jana | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Laura | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Mercè | Lesbian | ✓ | ||
Paula | Asexual | ✓ | ||
Xavier | Gay | ✓ | ||
Focus group | Aina | Bisexual | ✓ | |
Mariona | Bisexual | ✓ | ||
Martí | Gay | ✓ |
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Wilson-Daily, A.E.; Harris, R.; Sebares-Valle, G.; Sabido-Codina, J. Revisiting Past Experiences of LGBTQ+-Identifying Students: An Analysis Framed by the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability 2022, 14, 16213. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316213
Wilson-Daily AE, Harris R, Sebares-Valle G, Sabido-Codina J. Revisiting Past Experiences of LGBTQ+-Identifying Students: An Analysis Framed by the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability. 2022; 14(23):16213. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316213
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilson-Daily, Ann E., Richard Harris, Gemma Sebares-Valle, and Judit Sabido-Codina. 2022. "Revisiting Past Experiences of LGBTQ+-Identifying Students: An Analysis Framed by the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals" Sustainability 14, no. 23: 16213. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316213
APA StyleWilson-Daily, A. E., Harris, R., Sebares-Valle, G., & Sabido-Codina, J. (2022). Revisiting Past Experiences of LGBTQ+-Identifying Students: An Analysis Framed by the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability, 14(23), 16213. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316213