In Their Own Words: LGBTQIA+ Stigma in Secondary School
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Behavioral Health Impact of Stigma
1.2. Academic Impact of Stigma
1.3. Perspectives from LGBTQIA+ Youth
1.4. Research Aim
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participant Characteristics
2.2. Focus Group Format
2.3. Qualitative Analysis Technique
3. Results
3.1. Themes
3.2. Defining Stigma
P3.1. “Like a social bad taste in your mouth, a negative association to one group”.
P2.2. “Stigmatization is the act of being prejudiced….so they can think it, but when they act on it, then you know about it ...the stigma is out there”.
P1.1. “Any actively harmful or even passively negligent behavior on the part of an opposing party”.
P2.1. ”Even though my parents haven’t been outwardly against it they’ve still not done much besides tell me about why I’m wrong, and that’s an answer isn’t it? When they don’t do anything, that’s another response even though people say it’s nothing”.
P2.3. “The people saying ‘oh, I’ll pray for you’…like your problems are your fault…they’re because you belong to this group. They’re because you’re, you know, struggling with this. Like I’m so sorry, but you’re on your own like you did this to yourself. That’s kind of what I picture”.
3.3. Identity Development Challenges
3.3.1. Being Out
P1.3. “I feel like I kind of went back in the closet for a little bit my first like 2 years of high school. So, I kind of told everyone, ‘No, it was a phase.’ Definitely not because I, you know, I didn’t want to be the bully loner kid who was getting told that they’re going to hell. That was not cool and it was very, very difficult”.
P1.2. “So I don’t remember consciously necessarily going back into the closet, but I did. I’d never talked about it. I stopped, you know, labeling myself outwardly as being trans and stuff”.
P2.1. “I wasn’t really out at all like during like middle and high school. I didn’t really officially come out to like maybe the last month of my senior year of high school”.
P2.2. “I came out as bisexual and most of my peers took it okay. It was when I came out as a lesbian at school is what I experienced a lot worse, I guess, kind of behavior from people”.
3.3.2. Defining Terms for Identity
P1.1 “My pronouns are they, them, and theirs. My micro-label is technically gender fluid, but I use trans and nonbinary more often because those are terms that people know. I use any pronouns except for ‘it.’ That’s just the only one I don’t like”.
P1.2. ”The difference between my sexuality coming out and my later gender coming out had two completely different experiences”.
P2.2. “I always kind of knew since middle school that I was a part of the LGBT community. I was just never really out about it. I didn’t really realize I was a lesbian until, like in the middle of high school”.
P1.3. “I started questioning my own sexuality in elementary school because everyone was interested in boys and like all my friends. And then I was like, you know, I like boys, but I’m pretty sure I like girls too, you know? And I just, I was I can remember being like 10 and thinking that”.
P3.1. “I am a Lesbian, F. E. M. M. E. Gender is less clear, like there’s a lot of different labels I’d go with like for most of my like gender journey. I was trans male and I still kind of identify with the term FTM”.
3.3.3. Online Influences
P2.4. “Instagram was very big for learning stuff and YouTube, I spent so much time on YouTube watching other like queer YouTubers talk about their experiences and just, you know, live in their life. And that’s where basically I learned about everything”.
P2.2. “I would go on YouTube, and I remember specifically watching BuzzFeed videos where they talk about like six lesbians you’ll meet in college, or what Hogwarts house are you based on your favorite queer band, or just random things like that. Those just started to just steadily like introduce me to what LGBT meant and the different identities and what all the flags meant”.
P3.1. “I had to do it all in secret but yeah I was on Tumblr a lot and you know, just talking with other like trans youth”.
P1.1. “And with that, do still practice like online safety. Like maybe don’t tell them your exact age and where you live. If you’re a minor, you know, like you still keep up that level of security and safety. Use an anonymous name you know, like trust them with your heart, but maybe not your safety”.
P1.1. “I found a lot of support and love on just online communities”.
P2.2. “When I finally got to TikTok that was where I got introduced to a lot of queer theory and history”.
P1.1. “Like P1.2 and P1.3…even though none of us as far as I’m aware, are really all that out or transitioned all that much, we were able to find a lot more people in our communities just because we went on to Discord and just found each other”.
3.4. Family Relationships
P1.3. “So, like I did come out to my mom and she’s very chill about it, but we just kind of keep it low key just because of like the area. But I have a very supportive and a very fabulous family”.
P1.2. “And my parents took her [the school counselor] seriously and got me into therapy. I don’t think it was very effective because that lady she wasn’t a bad therapist, but she also did not specialize in gender affirming care. She was just a general family therapist, so that wasn’t very helpful for me and my situation. But I liked knowing that my parents were willing to get me help”.
P1.1. “I texted them in July of last year about it because I just sort of bottled it up for a while. And then I realized, and I was like I need to tell them. And then we didn’t talk for six months. It was just one of those things of we’re not going to touch it until you want to talk to us about it”.
P2.4. “I just had really unsupportive parents and siblings”.
P1.1. “Because even though my parents haven’t been outwardly against it, they’ve still not done much besides tell me about why I’m wrong, and that’s an answer too, isn’t it? When they don’t do anything, that’s another response. Even though people say it’s nothing”.
P1.2. “Adults in my life, my extended family was not as accepting. Like, I remember at one point just very offhandedly saying to my mom, you know like it really bothers me whenever people call me Miss. Like I would prefer Mr. over that. And she got so angry, like irrationally angry over that”.
3.5. Religious Tensions
P2.2. “I was raised very Catholic and that obviously it [being bisexual] just like wasn’t accepted very well. I went on a few bible retreats after being outed to my family and they weren’t specifically listed as conversion or anything like that, but I mean they still were bible retreats that would just not say anything specific, because that would get them in trouble. It would just be more like reintroducing God into your life by getting rid of sinful lifestyles”.
P1.3. “I go to church every Sunday. I read my Bible. But you know, my God doesn’t hate. That’s what I believe. And so, I would get told that I was going to hell constantly. And that was very difficult for me to hear…Like that was the most heartbreaking thing”.
P1.1. “I don’t necessarily know their stand, the churches our churches stance on other people. It’s just one of those things of I’m not going near it even if they are supportive…I broke away from Christianity when I was 12 and when I told that to my mom, she got really upset…and ended the argument by saying, ‘I just don’t want my kids going to hell’….I will say I gave up on it [religion] a long time ago because it was so damaging and hurtful. And I wish I could go back, but maybe when I’m 70. I don’t know. I can’t see a way back right now”.
3.6. School Relationships
P1.1. In my senior year, I worked at the school’s library as like a one of the little hour-long segments of my day and there was a big discussion of, well, we have all these LGBT books and we don’t really have a section for them since they’re across so many genres. Should we add a little flag on there to let people know? And so a… big counterpoint that was brought up by the by a trans friend of mine who was also working there was saying if we make this obvious the bullying is going to increase”.
P2.1. “I was just never really out about it, because it was a very small school, so like the only other person that I knew that had come out was one of my friends. She was openly like a lesbian and stuff, and like the teachers, and like other students, they weren’t very accepting of it”.
P1.2. ”My parents found out that I was trans because of a teacher I trusted. I told them that at the time I use he/they pronouns and wanted to go by [a different name], and she called my parents and she said as a mother and a Christian, you know, that type of a thing. It ruined my relationship with my parents for a while”.
P1.2. “The club was so frowned upon that in the yearbook…it says that we are a ‘school pride club’ and that we are a ‘volunteer service organization’ instead of being anything LGBTQ”.
P2.1. “We had a student-run news broadcast that would play during this one class period and there were some students who were very transphobic…. they specifically did a segment making fun of me being trans and it was broadcast to the whole school. One of the vice-principals, she took it down and she banned those kids from doing that broadcast…no one did anything significant except…took down the video”.
P1.3. “After I’d already come out and then what kind of led me to going back in the closet is a TikTok was made about me and the other openly out people [at] the middle and high school that we went to. And it was a picture of me, a picture of a bunch of other kids. And yeah, I reported it. It never got taken down. I had people showing me the video, like, you need to do something about this. You and a bunch of other people are being targeted”.
3.7. Ideas for Schools to Support LGBTQIA+ Students
3.7.1. Increased Resource Access
P1.2. ”I would also say have resources available, not just, you know, like their guidance counselors, like have posters up with like The Trevor Project and things like that all around the school in inconspicuous areas. Information around the school not hidden, but conspicuous so kids can see it in bathrooms, lunch room, hallways”.
P2.4. “There was really a lack of just any sort of like queer like when we were in history. No talking about like we’re like historical figures. Anything like that. We didn’t really talk about any queer literature, anything like that, even though there was some that was like very, very popular, and would have been very like helpful to the curriculum at the time. We just never talked about it, and I wish there was more of that in schools, and I think that would be helpful, for like LGBTQ+ students to feel connected to their community, and also like give them a space to talk about what being LGBTQ+ looks like as a like as a young as a young student”.
P1.2. “That if they say I want to come out to my parents, but I need help doing so helping that child form a plan in place and maybe having the school stand with the child, you know. Maybe their favorite teacher who is supportive or a counselor and stuff to help mediate that discussion with the parents and help the parent, you know, with questions that maybe the child doesn’t know how to answer and give them that safe environment. Maybe give the parent resources”.
Often clubs were dependent upon a single teacher organizing it and the club dissolved if the teacher left the school. “We had a Native American club and we had like three Native American students, but we didn’t have an LGBT club which I think is kind of weird” (P1.3).
3.7.2. Safety in Secondary Schools
P3.1. “What I wish my high school would have done better is let me use the freaking boy’s bathroom without threatening detention…. the compromise was to let me use the teacher’s bathroom which is on one end of the school…. or use the bathrooms like outside the special education classrooms…. Everyone’s going to the bathroom across the hall and then like I’m down here walking down the stairs…it was like a very outing experience”.
P2.1. “And for the schools basically just not to treat ‘gay’ like it’s a bad word. Pretty much like any kid would mention that in class, and teachers would just immediately like shut them down, or just tell them not to say that, and they would just treat it like this like awful like dirty word or something”.
P3.1. “I did try sports once like I wanted to join lacrosse or cross country… most sports team that they had and they were like we need to check if you can be on the boys team. Even as cross country and they’re not really divided by gender”.
3.7.3. Queer History
P1.1. “Make inclusivity in the classroom a priority. Like you know we all take history class, never once did we talk about queer people in it. Yet here we are, you know like Alan Turing existed. Why did we never talk about him whenever we went over WWII? You know like you can incorporate it. It is not that hard. You’re going out of your way to avoid talking about queer people”.
P2.2. “I would also tell schools to teach things about Stonewall and what happened to queer people throughout history, especially like in the Holocaust that was so skipped over in school. Like I didn’t know what the upside-down pink triangle meant until like a year ago and I feel like that should have been covered…I would tell schools to learn about queer history earlier”.
3.8. Coping Tips for Queer Youth
3.8.1. Coping by Maintaining Personal Safety
P1.2. “And then I will also say my advice to younger queer people this I, and I mean this seriously, do not come out if it is not safe….The social pressure and cultural idea that you have to come out to be your true self, that’s BS and you can quote me on that. That gets people killed. That gets people like my friend homeless…you know”?
3.8.2. Use of Social Support to Cope with Stigma
P2.1. “I would say just like talk to people in the community because, like, I know that they can actually understand, like my struggles and stuff for, like I understand, even if they don’t really give me a solution to the problem and I’ve always found a lot of solace listening to music”.
P2.1. “During like middle school and stuff there weren’t really like teachers to go to. I didn’t have, like a there weren’t a lot of LGBT like friends…. but like now [that I’m in college] I have like a big friend group of LGBT people so I have plenty to go to that can like understand like my point of view and stuff. So, I think that having people that like know what you’re going through helps a lot even if they don’t give you a real solution to it”.
P3.1. “I guess the things I would tell like a young trans person is you know like be like I was being like unapologetically you like even in the face of a lot of rough things. And to you know stay close with the people that do support you even if it’s not you know the traditional kind of support kids have of like parents. You know if your support has to be your high school counselor and your friends and your English teacher, then you know that’s how it is. And you know appreciate them like they were family, the resources that are there”.
P2.4. “I would say to my younger self, I would tell her it doesn’t matter what people think, especially in high school and especially in middle school because once you get to college you’re going to meet so many people that think like you and act like you that you are not going to really care what those people thought about you and you won’t see them again”.
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Please share a first name we can call you for this discussion. It can be real or a pseudonym. We will not use names in our research paper to maintain confidentiality. If you are comfortable, share your pronouns, gender identity and sexual orientation.
- Tell us a few things about your secondary school when you were ages 12–18 (middle and high school). Was it a public or private school? Was it in a rural or urban area?
- How “out” were you as an LGBTQIA person during secondary school?
- In your school what LGBTQIA resources or supports were available?
- How do you define stigma that impacts LGBTQIA individuals in society?
- In what ways do you feel stigma impacted your experience at school (i.e., bullying? micro-aggressions?)
- Talk about how you were treated at school—by staff, teachers, or administrators and by other students.
- What tips would you share with a younger person on how to cope with or combat stigma in their daily life?
- In your opinion, what could schools do to improve the experiences of LGBTQIA students and address stigma and discrimination?
- Is there anything more you would like to share about your experiences with stigma and discrimination as an LGBTQIA individual?
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Stevenson, E.; Sandman, G. In Their Own Words: LGBTQIA+ Stigma in Secondary School. Youth 2024, 4, 968-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030061
Stevenson E, Sandman G. In Their Own Words: LGBTQIA+ Stigma in Secondary School. Youth. 2024; 4(3):968-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030061
Chicago/Turabian StyleStevenson, Erin, and Gregory Sandman. 2024. "In Their Own Words: LGBTQIA+ Stigma in Secondary School" Youth 4, no. 3: 968-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030061
APA StyleStevenson, E., & Sandman, G. (2024). In Their Own Words: LGBTQIA+ Stigma in Secondary School. Youth, 4(3), 968-982. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030061