64 research outputs found

    Free2Be... Yet?: The Second National Study of Australian High School Students Who Identify as Gender and Sexuality Diverse

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    Free2Be…Yet?, a follow-up to the 2015 Free2Be? report, details the findings from a second nationwide survey of gender and sexuality diverse Australian secondary school students. The name, while also intended to signal the continuation of the original line of research, was designed to highlight the central research question for teenagers: Is your school a place where it is safe for you to be yourself? Are you free to be you? As with the previous iteration of the research, the project’s core aims were to: Gain a better understanding of how gender and sexuality diverse students experience their school environment(s) with regards to treatment of gender and sexuality diversity. Investigate links between students’ reported school climate and various measures of their school wellbeing and associated academic outcomes (EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CAN BE DOWNLOADED HERE: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:59230)

    Trans/gender-diverse students' perceptions of positive school climate and teacher concern as factors in school belonging : results from an Australian national study

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    Background/Context: In recent years, numerous, ongoing moral panics with respect to the acknowledgment of gender and sexuality diversity within curriculum/ policies have done considerable damage to Australian educators’ confidence and capacity to support gender and sexuality diverse students. Trans/gender-diverse students have been specifically targeted during this period. Purpose: Cisnormative microaggressions are a pervasive element of the Australian school climate, impacting trans/gender-diverse students’ relationships with school-based adults and peers and their experiences of schooling more broadly. This article seeks to contribute to scholarship exploring school well-being for trans/gender-diverse students, inclusive of students’ sense of their teachers’ concern for their personal and academic well-being, and its relationship to students’ perceptions of their school climate. Participants: This article explores data from trans/gender-diverse participants (n = 685) in the 2021 Free2Be. . .Yet? Australian national online survey of gender and sexuality diverse high school students in Grades/Years 7–12. Research Design: Using students’ self-reported data on selected quantitative measures of school climate with respect to gender and sexuality diversity, alongside perceptions of teacher concern and expectations for success, as selected indicators of school-based well-being, this research sought to identify these variables’ predictive impact on students’ sense of belonging at school

    Gender Equity in Melbourne's Select Entry High School (SEHS) System

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    This research paper reports on findings from a comprehensive synthesis of research related to gender and Melbourne’s system of Select Entry High Schools (SEHS). The research described in this report was commissioned and funded by the Department of Education and Training, Victoria, with industry partners Portable and Huddle. This research is situated within a larger project entitled: Gender Equity - Consultation and Codesign. The report synthesises previous research in the field, alongside reflections on new data collected over 2021/2022 from students, parents and educators from both within, and in proximity to, the SEHS system, with the aim of generating original, empirically-driven recommendations for policy and practice in the area of SEHS entrance for young women. The project aimed to better understand and address the drivers of gender disparity for high performing girls at SEHS in Victoria, given the larger proportions of male-identifying students and the subsequent gender imbalance present within the system. As feminist gender scholars whose research engages with gender identities and sexuality, the authors acknowledge the complexities inherent to discussions of gender identities. Therefore, throughout the report, we use a range of socio-linguistic terms to represent gender. As the codesign workshops themselves did not explore gender identity, we cannot know how the participants understood their gender identities. To reflect this we have used the terms ‘boys’ and ‘girls’ in order to engage with gender disparity, and also the terms ‘female identifying’ and ‘male identifying’ and ‘girl identified’ and ‘boy identified’ to attempt to capture some of the nuances of contemporary gender identities (see, for example, Miller, 2016; Zimman, 2009)

    Inclusive pedagogies for transgender and gender diverse children : parents' perspectives on the limits of discourses of bullying and risk in schools

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    This paper reports on an Australian national investigation of parents of school-aged children attending government schools. The research objective was to ascertain what parents thought in relation to gender and sexuality diversity-related content inclusions in the curriculum, and how a subset of these parents who had a gender and sexuality diverse (GSD) child, experience the public education system for/with their child. Here, we particularly focus on the voices of parents with a transgender or gender-diverse (TGD) child. We examine how these young people are positioned in discourses of risk and safety and how discrimination is depoliticised through bullying discourse. We note how bullying is framed as individualised, leaving broader cisnormative discourses unquestioned. A pedagogy of containment places the burden of gender identity, relationship management and education on the TGD student and family, highlighting a need for more professional development of school personnel

    What Parents Want: Talking about Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: A Portfolio of Professional Learning Resources for Educators

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    This output is a portfolio of research-based documents developed from the ARC-funded research "Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences" (DP18). The portfolio of materials is designed to raise educators' awareness about gender and sexuality diversity, including what Australian public school parents want in terms of inclusion of this topic area in the curriculum and the experiences of parents of gender and sexuality diverse students. The portfolio includes a Facilitator Booklet for in-school training, a Participant Booklet for (teacher/educator) participants; Infographics which visually disseminate the quant/qual findings; and a Playscript which is the basis for the "What Parents Want" 45-min film, a verbatim piece crafted using the words of participating parents

    Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences and Schooling Responses: Queensland Snapshot Report

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    This Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project (DP180101676) examined parents’ perspectives on the in/exclusion of gender and sexuality diversity (GSD) in public school curriculum. Findings from the GSDS national survey of Australian parents of K-12 government school students were isolated to the 461 (22%) parents who resided in the state of Queensland (hereafter, QLD)

    Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences and Schooling Responses: Victoria Snapshot Report

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    This Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project (DP180101676) examined parents’ perspectives on the in/exclusion of gender and sexuality diversity (GSD) in public school curriculum. Findings from the GSDS national survey of Australian parents of K-12 government school students were isolated to the 604 (28.9%) parents who resided in the state of Victoria (VIC)

    Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences and Schooling Responses: South Australia Snapshot Report

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    This Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project (DP180101676) examined parents’ perspectives on the in/exclusion of gender and sexuality diversity (GSD) in public school curriculum. Findings from the GSDS national survey of Australian parents of K-12 government school students were isolated to the 140 (6.7%) parents who resided in the state of South Australia (hereafter, SA)

    Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences and Schooling Responses: New South Wales Snapshot Report

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    This Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project (DP180101676) examined parents’ perspectives on the in/exclusion of gender and sexuality diversity (GSD) in public school curriculum. Findings from the GSDS national survey of Australian parents of K–12 government school students were isolated to the 616 (29.4%) parents who resided in the state of New South Wales (hereafter, NSW)

    Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Schools: Parental Experiences and Schooling Responses: Western Australia Snapshot Report

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    This Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project (DP180101676) examined parents’ perspectives on the in/exclusion of gender and sexuality diversity (GSD) in public school curriculum. Findings from the GSDS national survey of Australian parents of K-12 government school students were isolated to the 174 (8.3%) parents who resided in the state of Western Australia (hereafter, WA)
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