School Factors Strongly Impact Transgender and Non-Binary Youths’ Well-Being
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Overarching Study
2.2. Participants and Recruitment for the Overarching Study
2.3. Design
2.4. Sample
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Obstacles and Protective Factors Impacting TNB Youth Wellbeing
3.1.1. School Climate and Culture about Gender Diversity and TNB Students
“When I came out I said, ‘Hey, my name’s [chosen name] now,’ I don’t go by, like, my birth name. People were confused, they didn’t know what it was.”(Anto, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“So I just sat on the bench. And then the teacher was like ‘Well, go play.’, and I was like ‘Yeah, but what side do I play on?”. * (Quotations followed by «*» have been translated from French).(Arthur, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“[…] people will judge that something is feminine then they’ll associate feminine with girl, that’s more difficult […] these things really hurt me, but others, you know, they can’t understand that, like, how we really feel.”(Tina, 17-year-old non-binary student)*
“[…] Having to choose every time where I feel the most comfortable and like, I don’t want to make other people uncomfortable either […]” *(Tina, 17-year-old non-binary student)
‘’I had asked not to have to go to a boy or a girl bathroom, so they told me to go... to go to a toilet that is really really far!’’*(Max, 16-year-old, non-binary student)
“Interviewer: At the beginning, you were going to change in the guys’ locker room but after, he told you to go in the mixed locker room?Participant: In the mixed toilets.Interviewer: In the mixed toilets?Participant, Yeah.Interviewer: Ok. Ok... How did you feel about all that?Participant: Well badly. Because, you know …I want to-I want to go to the guys’ bathrooms, to the guys’ locker rooms.Interviewer: What effect did it have on you?Participant: Well that hurt me.”(Eric, 15-year-old, trans boy student)
“Just for teachers to use it [chosen name] it was a big deal […] they asked me for a gender dysphoria diagnosis report and proofs that I was going to take hormones and everything when it shouldn’t even be necessary.” *(Max, 16-years-old non-binary student)
“It’s really hard to show my papers to others, like people I just met. They have to check my deadname. For me, my deadname is something really private […].” *(Tina, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“I am in a school which is quite organized too... I was the first [trans youth], but they are really open, so it helps […] [I had to persevere] but they saw that this was important. They said they would take steps [to adapt the school], and they did it with me... they have always been there to help me.’’*(Axel, 15-year-old, trans male student)
3.1.2. Direct Attitudes and Behaviours of Adults in Positions of Authority
“[…] the first person I told [about my gender identity] was the social worker at my school, and since, she has always been super supportive […] she’s helped me a lot… it’s like a super important relationship for me.” *(Olivier, 17-year-old trans male student)
“Teachers have a closed mind, and they really influence the students a lot, so, I don’t know, if at least teachers were there to support me it would’ve been that already, like something, but not even.” *(Tina, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“Let’s say I was talking about my needs and all, and school personnel, in moments like these are just like: ‘Ok, yeah, but it’s your problem’ like they don’t even care.”*(Max, 16-year-old non-binary student)
“[My teacher said:] Yeah OK, but you’re just one student and there are 30 other students in the class.”*(Skyler, 16-year-old non-binary student)
“I had to explain almost everything to the vice-principal and then she asked me weird questions.” *(Skyler, 16-year-old non-binary student)
“I actually failed a French writing assignment in grade 9 because I wrote using male pronouns.”(Zack, 17-year-old non-binary student)
3.1.3. Peer Attitudes and Behaviours toward Gender Diversity and TNB Students
“[My friends], they accepted my transition really well and they switched my pronouns and my name pretty much on the spot, so that was really cool. And it had a really positive effect on me.” *(Remi, a 17-year-old non-binary student)
“Because, you know, before people started using the right pronouns and the right name with me, I ended up on the psychiatry unit like three times.”*(Arthur, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“At my school, we have a GSA. […] So, all of the LGBTQ kids, at our school, we, like, go there.”
“And people were like, ‘Oh yeah. She’s trans, or whatever. And so, no one really cares that much, which is good”(Marlie, 15-year-old trans girl student)
“It’s ok ‘cause people, they don’t care, but at the same time they accept it.”*(Eric, 15 years-old trans male student)
“And you know, even my friends at school, I am sitting at the table with them for lunch and I feel like I’m sitting with strangers, you know. I feel alone surrounded by people, so well”. *(Arthur, 17-year-old non-binary student)
“ […] And one of them was, like, one of my ex-friends, which is not that great. […] And he was making fun of me for it and stuff, and telling other people about that, so that’s not cool.”(Marlie, a 15-year-old trans girl student)
3.2. Theme 2: Strategies Used by TNB Students to Face Adversity
“For sure, if people had comments to make, I mean, I really have a lot of friends and I know that my friends are there to defend me […].” *(Olivier, 17-year-old trans male student)
“I don’t react badly–these people they don’t accept me the way I am. It’s not worth it to stay with them […].” *(Axel, 15-year-old trans male student)
“[…] we get the impression that we have to explain everything for them to feel comfortable, or for them to agree to [offer a trans-inclusive accommodation], but at the same time we don’t feel like doing it sometimes.” *(Skyler, 16-year-old non-binary student)
“[…] At least we were able to meet halfway.”*(Coralie, a 15-year-old trans girl student)
“Sometimes I hide my identity […] let’s say I’m with an adult that might be in a position of authority or if I’m in an alley and it’s nighttime and I don’t feel like getting into trouble.”*(Skyler, 16-year-old non-binary student)
“Even when I tell people I’m trans, I only say that I am a guy, I don’t say that I’m non-binary because it’s complicated and I don’t feel like explaining”*.(Remi, a 17-year-old non-binary student)
4. Discussion
4.1. Implication for Practice
4.2. Study Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Kelley, J.; Pullen Sansfaçon, A.; Gelly, M.A.; Chiniara, L.; Chadi, N. School Factors Strongly Impact Transgender and Non-Binary Youths’ Well-Being. Children 2022, 9, 1520. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101520
Kelley J, Pullen Sansfaçon A, Gelly MA, Chiniara L, Chadi N. School Factors Strongly Impact Transgender and Non-Binary Youths’ Well-Being. Children. 2022; 9(10):1520. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101520
Chicago/Turabian StyleKelley, Janie, Annie Pullen Sansfaçon, Morgane A. Gelly, Lyne Chiniara, and Nicholas Chadi. 2022. "School Factors Strongly Impact Transgender and Non-Binary Youths’ Well-Being" Children 9, no. 10: 1520. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101520
APA StyleKelley, J., Pullen Sansfaçon, A., Gelly, M. A., Chiniara, L., & Chadi, N. (2022). School Factors Strongly Impact Transgender and Non-Binary Youths’ Well-Being. Children, 9(10), 1520. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101520