Gen Z GSAs: Trans-Affirming and Racially Inclusive Gender-Sexuality Alliances in Secondary Schools

Madelaine Adelman, Sean Nonnenmacher, Bailey Borman, J. Kosciw
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Abstract

Background: Within the context of high school student clubs, the acronym “GSA” originally stood for “Gay-Straight Alliance.” It described gay and straight youth working as allies to learn about themselves and each other’s lives and to navigate and address interpersonal and institutional anti-LGBTQ school policies and practices. Today, the acronym is commonly parsed by Gen Z members as “Gender-Sexuality Alliance” to better represent the presence and needs of transgender, nonbinary, and gender-nonconforming students, and their cisgender allies. Purpose of Study: We inquire how students learn about themselves and others—partially, unevenly, and, at times, uneasily—as they incorporate socially resistant gender and race identity work within their GSA school clubs. Participants: Participants were cisgender (n = 10) and transgender and nonbinary (n = 10), racially diverse high school students in GSAs between 14 and 18 years of age. Research Design: Our analysis is grounded in critical pragmatism, a methodological integration of critical theory and pragmatism, which stems from reflexive immersion in the research context and use of empirical inquiry as a tool to acknowledge and guide transformation of entrenched anti-trans oppression in schools, noting that racism, among other forms of structural inequality, is built into schools. We analyzed the interview component of a larger mixed-methods research study conducted by the GLSEN Research Institute, which was intended to generate insight about student and advisor experiences of GSAs. Findings: Our study reveals that while GSAs can be a space for marginalized LGBTQ students to create a collective empowering identity, they can also be a space where some differences may be flattened or left out. We explore how students make visible racial and gender identity groups during GSA activities that are often erased in secondary schools. This implicitly and explicitly entails deploying identity as a challenge to a school’s heteronormative, cisnormative, and white-dominant official curriculum, although the depth or complexity of a GSA’s visibility-based education and critique may be inadequate, given available resources. Our findings demonstrate how GSA students leverage their identity as a goal when mobilizing themselves and their peers to alter a school’s norms and practices. Conclusions: Gen Z GSA students have begun to reimagine their clubs as if they were built from the ground up, with the needs of transgender students and students of color placed at their center. GSAs remain a critical but underdeveloped resource for learning how to recognize and challenge intersectional forms of interpersonal and institutional marginalization.
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Z世代gsa:中学中的跨性别肯定和种族包容的性别联盟
背景:在高中学生俱乐部的背景下,缩写“GSA”最初代表“同性恋-异性恋联盟”。它描述了同性恋和异性恋青年作为盟友一起了解自己和彼此的生活,并引导和解决人际关系和机构反lgbtq的学校政策和实践。如今,这个缩写词通常被Z世代成员解析为“性别联盟”(Gender-Sexuality Alliance),以更好地代表跨性别、非二元性和性别不一致的学生以及他们的顺性别盟友的存在和需求。研究目的:我们调查学生是如何了解自己和他人的——部分地,不均衡地,有时,不安地——当他们在GSA学校俱乐部中加入社会抵抗性的性别和种族认同工作时。参与者:参与者为14 - 18岁的gsa高中的顺性别(n = 10)和跨性别和非二元性别(n = 10)。研究设计:我们的分析以批判实用主义为基础,这是一种批判理论和实用主义的方法论整合,源于对研究背景的反思性沉浸,并将实证调查作为一种工具来承认和指导学校中根深蒂固的反跨性别压迫的转变,注意到种族主义和其他形式的结构性不平等,已经融入了学校。我们分析了GLSEN研究所进行的一项大型混合方法研究的访谈部分,该研究旨在深入了解gsa的学生和导师经历。研究结果:我们的研究表明,虽然gsa可以成为被边缘化的LGBTQ学生创造集体赋权身份的空间,但它们也可能是一个消除或忽略某些差异的空间。我们探讨了学生如何在GSA活动中建立可见的种族和性别认同群体,这些群体在中学中经常被抹去。这隐含和明确地要求将身份作为对学校异性规范、顺规范和白人主导的官方课程的挑战,尽管鉴于现有资源,GSA基于可见性的教育和批评的深度或复杂性可能是不足的。我们的研究结果表明,GSA学生在动员自己和同龄人改变学校的规范和做法时,如何利用自己的身份作为目标。结论:Z世代的GSA学生已经开始重新构想他们的俱乐部,好像他们是从头开始建立的,以跨性别学生和有色人种学生的需求为中心。gsa仍然是学习如何认识和挑战人际和制度边缘化交叉形式的重要但不发达的资源。
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