Leadership magazine Nov/Dec 2017 V47 No. 2 | Page 12

Including queer voices in our equity dialogue For individuals, schools and school systems, providing safer, more inclusive school environments for LGBTQ+ youth can be life or death work. 12 Leadership Following graduate school and prior to my first administrative post, I taught summer school. At the end of the summer, the entire school gathered to take a group picture. Scrunched together, sev- eral of the older boys began to lie on one another. There was nothing remotely sex- ual about this, until one of my colleagues reminded the boys that they were “acting gay” and that this type of behavior would be punished if it continued. Moving to the Bay Area, I expected that the education community would radically support our queer students and that my pre- vious co-worker was an anachronism. How- ever, that teacher wasn’t out of character for many educators, even in the most progres- sive hubs. Leading my first professional develop- ment session as an administrator, a veteran teacher told me afterward that she was pray- ing for me. My content wasn’t that bad, she had just divined that I wasn’t straight. Out- side of school, I’ve been called “faggot” and had items thrown at me from car windows. Life for queer folks isn’t always easy, despite the immense social and political victories that have happened within the past decade. Beyond anecdotes, statistics show that queer youth are in crisis. Lesbian, gay, bi- sexual, transgender, queer/questioning and other (LGBTQ+) students are more likely to be bullied, have rumors spread about them, and be sexually harassed (Greytak, et. al). They feel less safe at school, and are more than twice as likely to have missed school in past month because they felt unsafe or uncomfortable. Common sense says that when students are bullied or don’t feel safe in school, they cannot perform at their best. This problem extends past our hallways and impacts students their entire adulthood. A 2013 study found that victims of child- hood bullying were at increased risk of poor health, wealth and social-relationship outcomes in adulthood compared to their straight, non-bullied peers (Wolke, et. al). Unfortunately, there are a number of students who see these outcomes and take their own lives rather than deal with the daily torment. By James Hilton Harrell