ProjectQED: Building an Inclusive Department for Queer and Trans Students, Staff, and Faculty

Q. Sedlacek, Kia Darling-Hammond
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Abstract

Inclusivity efforts focused on gender and sexuality in higher education often fail to identify and address the specific needs of queer and Trans Students, Staff, and Faculty of Color. In this program description, we report on ProjectQED, a student-organized event series at the Stanford Graduate School of Education that sought to address these unmet needs using intersectionality theory as an organizing framework. ProjectQED centered LGBTQ+ and same-gender loving (SGL) perspectives from Asian American, Black, Latinx, Native American, and Pacific Islander communities through a series of invited guest lectures and film discussions between 2016 and 2019. The broadly inclusive nature of these events expanded opportunities for building community and solidarity across campus, bringing together interest groups and affinity groups centered around gender and sexuality, racial and ethnic identity, and multiple academic departments and disciplines. We share this program description as a model that staff and faculty at other institutions might replicate by centering the experiences of queer and trans People of Color in programming for LGBTQ+/SGL campus communities.
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项目:为酷儿和跨性别学生、教职员工建立一个包容的部门
在高等教育中,专注于性别和性的包容性努力往往无法识别和解决酷儿和跨性别学生、教职员工和有色人种学院的具体需求。在本项目描述中,我们报道了ProjectQED,这是斯坦福大学教育研究生院的一个学生组织的系列活动,旨在利用交叉性理论作为组织框架来解决这些未满足的需求。ProjectQED在2016年至2019年间通过一系列受邀嘉宾讲座和电影讨论,从亚裔美国人、黑人、拉丁裔、美洲原住民和太平洋岛民社区出发,以LGBTQ+和同性恋(SGL)为中心。这些活动具有广泛的包容性,扩大了在校园内建立社区和团结的机会,将以性别和性、种族和民族认同以及多个学术部门和学科为中心的利益团体和亲和力团体聚集在一起。我们分享了这一项目描述,认为其他机构的工作人员和教职员工可以通过在LGBTQ+/SGL校园社区的节目中集中酷儿和跨性别有色人种的经历来复制这一模式。
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来源期刊
Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education
Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
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