Analysis Of Matt Zalaznick's Article: Creating Inclusive Climates

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Matt Zalaznick’s article, “Creating Inclusive Climates”, offers suggestions for how schools can support transgender students and improve school climate by educating classmates and faculty about the needs and experiences of transgender children. The need for such education starts at the elementary school level with many students beginning to identify as being transgender as early as the age of the average kindergartener. Although the implications of Title IX protections state that schools must not discriminate against students on the basis of sex, many districts have strengthened the wording with amendments to include specific wording to include stronger protections for transgender students. Leaders need to ensure that there are adequate
• Reduced mental health issues. (Fewer incidences of depression and suicidal thoughts among transgender students.)
• Increased acceptance among the peers of transgender students. (Students look to those in a position of authority to garner a sense of appropriate behavior.)
These broadened perspectives will spill over into the community, and hopefully over time will create a more supportive and accepting society.

Personal Reflection This article highlights the ways our school and district are failing these students. We proclaim to be an inclusive “place”, but truth be told we are only comfortable if you conform to our definition of “normal”. The article suggests that, at the elementary level, we can include literature that features different family structures as an introduction to acceptance of differences. Last year, our library had a picture book, And Tango Makes Three, about two male penguins that were in a relationship and wanted to start a family like the other penguin couples. The minute the “content” was brought to our librarian’s attention, the book magically disappeared from the shelf. The issue was brought up before a faculty meeting, and the majority of the faculty agreed with the book being pulled from the shelf. The sad part is that we do have a couple of children within the school who have a family structure that resembles the characters in the book. I was lucky to grow up in a household that did not discriminate based on color, religion, socioeconomics, gender, or sexual orientation, but I learned quickly that my views are not similar to those of my peers. Here in South Mississippi, we are “behind the times” and not aligned with the rest of the nation when it comes to meeting the needs of LGBT students. How do we even attempt to close that gap when so many of the teachers and administrators do not agree with or believe in the “life style and choices of” LGBT

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