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It's OK to Be Neither: Teaching That Supports Gender-Variant Children

Posted: 12/21/2011 5:27 pm

This piece first appeared on rethinkingschools.org.

Allie arrived at our first-grade classroom wearing a sweatshirt with a hood. I asked her to take off her hood, and she refused. I thought she was just being difficult and ignored it. After breakfast we got in line for art, and I noticed that she still had not removed her hood. When we arrived at the art room, I said, "Allie, I'm not playing. It's time for art. The rule is no hoods or hats in school."

She looked up with tears in her eyes, and I realized there was something wrong. Her classmates went into the art room, and we moved to the art storage area so that her classmates wouldn't hear our conversation. I softened my tone and asked her if she'd like to tell me what was wrong.

"My ponytail," she cried.

"Can I see?" I asked.

She nodded and pulled down her hood. Allie's braids had come undone overnight, and there hadn't been time to redo them in the morning, so they had to be put back in a ponytail. It was high up on the back of her head like those of many girls in our class, but I could see that to Allie it just felt wrong. With Allie's permission, I took the elastic out and re-braided her hair so that it could hang down.

"How's that?" I asked.

She smiled. "Good," she said and skipped off to join her friends in art.

'Why Do You Look Like a Boy?'

Allison was biologically a girl but felt more comfortable wearing Tony Hawk long-sleeved T-shirts, baggy jeans, and black tennis shoes. Her parents were accepting and supportive. Her mother braided her hair in cornrows because Allie thought it made her look like Will Smith's son Jaden in the remake of The Karate Kid. She preferred to be called Allie. The first day of school, children who hadn't been in Allie's class in kindergarten referred to her as "he."

I didn't want to assume I knew how Allie wanted me to respond to the continual gender mistakes, so I made a phone call home, and Allie's mom put me on speakerphone.

"Allie," she said, "Ms. Melissa is on the phone. She would like to know if you want her to correct your classmates when they say you are a boy, or if you would rather that she just doesn't say anything."

Allie was shy on the phone. "Um... tell them that I am a girl," she whispered.

The next day when I corrected classmates and told them that Allie was a girl, they asked her a lot of questions that she wasn't prepared for: "Why do you look like a boy?" "If you're a girl, why do you always wear boys' clothes?" Some even told her that she wasn't supposed to wear boys' clothes if she was a girl. It became evident that I would have to address gender directly in order to make the classroom environment more comfortable for Allie and to squash the gender stereotypes that my first graders had absorbed in their short lives.

Gender Training Starts Early

Gender is not a subject that I would have broached in primary grades a few years ago. In fact, I remember scoffing with colleagues when we heard about a young kindergarten teacher who taught gender-related curriculum. We thought her lessons were a waste of instructional time and laughed at her "girl and boy" lessons.

My own thoughts about gender curriculum shifted when I became a mother. As I shopped for infant clothes for my first daughter, I was disgusted that almost everything was pink and there was no mistaking the boys' section of the store for the girls' section. I refused to make my baby daughter fit in the box that society had created for her. "What if she doesn't like pink?" I thought. "What if she likes tigers and dinosaurs?"

As my two daughters grew, I talked with them about gender stereotypes. I let them choose "boys'" clothes if they wanted to (and often encouraged them, because they are more practical). The first week of kindergarten, my younger daughter's teacher told me that my daughter had had a heated argument with a boy while they played dress up. "She insisted that boys can wear dresses if they want to," the teacher told me. I beamed with pride.

Unfortunately, it wasn't until I had a child dealing with gender variance (defined as "behavior or gender expression that does not conform to dominant gender norms of male and female") in my classroom that I realized how important it is to teach about gender and break down gender stereotypes. Why did I wait so long? I should have taken a hint from that kindergarten teacher years ago. As I thought about how to approach the topic, I realized that the lessons I was developing weren't just for Allie. She had sparked my thinking, but all the children in my class needed to learn to think critically about gender stereotypes and gender nonconformity.

We started off with a lesson about toys, because it's a simple topic that I knew my students thought they had clear ideas about. The class gathered on the carpet, and I read William's Doll, which is about a boy who, against the wishes of his father, wants a doll more than anything.

After we read the story, I taped up two large pieces of paper and wrote "Boys" on one and "Girls" on the other. "Students," I said, "what are some toys that are for boys?" Eagerly, the students began to shout out their answers: Legos! Hot Wheels! Skateboards! Bikes! The list grew quite long. "OK," I said, "now tell me some toys that are for girls." Baby dolls! Nail polish! Barbies! Makeup!

When we had two extensive lists, I read both lists out loud to the class and then studied them carefully.

"Hmm," I said. "Here it says that Legos are for boys. Can girls play with Legos?"

"Yes!" most of them replied without hesitation.

"I wonder if any of the girls in our class like to play with Hot Wheels?"

"I do! I do!" blurted out some of the girls. We continued with the rest of the items on our "Boys" list, making a check mark next to each one as it was declared acceptable for girls.

Then we went on to the "Girls" list. We started with baby dolls. Because we had just read and discussed William's Doll, the children were OK with boys playing with dolls. "It's great practice for boys who want to be daddies when they grow up," I mentioned.

But when we got to nail polish and makeup, the children were unsure. "There are some very famous rock 'n' roll bands," I said, "and the men in those bands wear a lot of makeup." Some of the children gasped.

Then Isabela raised her hand: "Sometimes my uncle wears black nail polish." The students took a moment to think about this.

"My cousin wears nail polish, too!" said another student. Soon many students were eager to share examples of how people pushed the limits on gender. Our school engineer, Ms. Joan, drove a motorcycle. Jeremy liked to dance. I could see the gears turning in their brains as the gender lines started to blur.

Supporting Gender Variance Every Day

I knew that broadening my students' ideas of what was acceptable for boys and girls was an important first step, but to make Allie feel comfortable and proud of herself, I was going to have to go further.

For example, as teachers, we often use gender to divide students into groups or teams. It seems easy and obvious. Many of us do this when we line students up to go to the bathroom. In one conversation that I had with Allie's mother, she told me that Allie did not like using public bathrooms, because many times Allie had been accused of being in the wrong bathroom. As soon as she told me, I felt bad. By dividing the children into two lines by assigned gender, I had unintentionally made those children whose labels aren't so clear feel uncomfortable in more ways than one.

When we lined up to go to the bathroom, I kept my students in one line until we reached the bathroom, and then I let them separate to enter their bathrooms. Allie usually said she didn't need to use the bathroom. The few times that she did, I offered the bathroom around the corner, a single-stall bathroom that was usually unoccupied. When the kids came out of the bathroom, they wanted to line up as most classrooms do, in boys' and girls' lines. Instead, I thought up a new way for them to line up each day. For example: "If you like popsicles, line up here. If you like ice cream, line up here." They loved this, and it kept them entertained while they waited for their classmates. Here are a few more examples:

"Which would you choose?"

  • A skateboard or a bike?
  • Milk or juice?
  • Dogs or cats?
  • A hot day or a snow day?
  • Fiction or nonfiction?
  • Soccer or basketball?
  • A beach or a pool?

I also became very aware of using the phrase "boys and girls" to address my students. Instead, I used gender-neutral terms like "students" or "children." At first, the more I thought about it, the more frequently I'd say "boys and girls." I tried not to be too hard on myself when I slipped, and eventually I got out of the habit and used "students" regularly.

Around the same time, another child's mother told me that her son had been taunted for wearing a Hello Kitty Band-Aid. She mentioned that his sister was also teased at school for having a lunch bag with skulls on it. I planned more lessons to combat gender stereotypes in our classroom.

'It's OK to Be Different'

In order to deepen our discussion of gender, I selected another read-aloud. Before we read, I asked my students, "I would like to know, how many of you like to dance?" Most raised their hands.

"How many of you have been told you can't do something because it was 'only for boys' or 'only for girls'?" Many hands went up.

Then I read Oliver Button Is a Sissy. In the book, Oliver is bullied because he prefers dancing to sports. The students quickly realized that this was not fair and empathized with Oliver Button.

The following day we read It's Okay to Be Different, by Todd Parr. Parr's books are quite popular in the primary grades because they include an element of humor and simple, colorful illustrations. We read:

  • "It's OK to Wear Glasses"
  • "It's OK to Come from a Different Place"
  • "It's OK to Be a Different Color"

As we read, I asked questions to empower the students: "Who used to live in a different place?" Students proudly held up their hands. "Awesome!" I replied. "My mom comes from a different place, too. She used to live in Hong Kong."

Then I guided the direction of the conversation toward gender. As a class, we brainstormed a list of things that students thought were "OK" even though they might challenge society's gender norms. Monica told us very matter-of-factly, "It's OK for a girl to marry a girl," and Jordan said, "My dad carries a purse, and that's OK!" At that point I explained that my father and my friend Wayne both call their man purse a "murse." The children were fascinated.

Toward the end of the discussion, I explained, "People make all kinds of different decisions about gender. Sometimes, as we grow, we might not want to pick one or the other, and that's OK; we don't have to." I wanted them to begin to see that our lessons were not only about expanding the gender boxes that we've been put into, but also about questioning or eliminating them altogether.

Afterward, I had the students do a simple write-and-respond exercise. I asked them to pick one activity that they associated with girls and one associated with boys to write about and illustrate. Monica drew two brides in beautiful wedding gowns. Miguel drew a man with a purse slung over his shoulder. I showed off the pictures on the hallway bulletin board around the words "It's OK to Be Different."

Although things were getting better for Allie, she still faced many challenges. At the end of the school year, Allie's mother told me a heartbreaking story. She said that for Allie's recent birthday party, her grandmother had bought her colorful, form-fitting clothes and then demanded them back when Allie did not like them. "Does she know she is a girl?" she had yelled and announced that she would never buy her clothes again.

It was so sad to hear this. I visualized Allie on her special day, excitedly ripping open gifts in front of her family and friends only to find, again and again, that the gifts were things that she would never be comfortable with. As a mother, the feeling of extreme disappointment was unbearable for me to imagine.

I have just begun to empathize with the challenges that gender-variant children deal with. For some it may seem inappropriate to address these issues in the classroom. My job is not to answer the questions "Why?" or "How?" (although asking those questions and doing some research in order to better understand was definitely part of my process). Allie is the way she is. My job is not to judge but to teach, and I can't teach if the students in my class are distracted or uncomfortable. My job is also about preparing students to be a part of our society, ready to work and play with all kinds of people. I found that teaching about gender stereotypes is another social justice issue that needs to be addressed, like racism, immigrants' rights, or protecting the environment.

Later in the year, I opened my inbox one morning and read, "Andrew says he wants a Baby Alive doll, and he doesn't care if it's for girls. Thank you, Ms. Melissa!"

For more ideas for books for gender-variant or nonconforming kids, visit acceptingdad.com/supportive-book-media-for-gender-variant-non-conforming-kids.

 

Follow Melissa Bollow Tempel on Twitter: www.twitter.com/melissatempel

This piece first appeared on rethinkingschools.org. Allie arrived at our first-grade classroom wearing a sweatshirt with a hood. I asked her to take off her hood, and she refused. I thought she was j...
This piece first appeared on rethinkingschools.org. Allie arrived at our first-grade classroom wearing a sweatshirt with a hood. I asked her to take off her hood, and she refused. I thought she was j...
 
 
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01:03 AM on 12/28/2011
This lens you use to view your classroom has a positive impact on all your kids! Kids recieve so many messages about what it means to be a boy or a girl and messages about what is "for them" and "not for them." It's no wonder they look at each other as being so different. Boys and girls spend such disproportionate amounts of time in single gender peer groups where they're honing their social, communication and relationship skills in isolation of each other. Wouldn't it be great if we could find ways to bring kids together so they could learn from and about each other more? By finding ways to avoid organizing your classroom by gender, in addition to your thoughtful lessons on stereotypes, you helped create an environment in which boys and girls could come together to learn from and about one another, respect differences and discover their commonalities. Bravo!
We are developing an early intervention curriculum that focuses building a respectful classroom environment where kids are encouraged to think critically about gender stereotypes and enhance their communication, relationship and social skills.
05:04 PM on 12/24/2011
I agree with much of what was in the article. Melissa is a wise and compassionate teacher. However, I also agree with several posters who questioned her refusal to use the terms "boys and girls." The fact is that there are observable and internal sexual differences. These are real and not societal constructs.. What she is trying to teach them is that being a boy or girl doesn't mean you can only like certain toys, colors, dress a certain way etc. And that is very helpful and supportive of the children. But she is not helping them by denying scientific fact. I also question her apparent dismissal of the value of separate bathrooms. For children who come from certain religious backgrounds, modesty may be an important issue and it would be unfair to them to force them to use a unisex bathroom. If there is a real need for a unisex bathroom where children with gender fluidity can go without harassment, then the school should provide one. However, I don't see that is needed for the little girl who was described in the article. The explanation that girls(and boys) should be able to dress as they please(within school rules) without ridicule should enable her to use the girls bathroom without being teased.
02:54 AM on 01/11/2012
Suedora, even the "observable and internal sexual differences" vary from individual to individual, possibly as much as gender role and clothing choices. Where do intersex and transsexual children fit into this girl-boy dichotomy? A dear friend of mine is an MTF transsexual; she says her parents knew their little boy was different when they saw him dressing GI Joe in Barbie clothes. I like Melissa's encouraging of the idea that we are people first; students together, rather than girl versus boy.
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FaceTheTruth00
I'm a girl.
03:33 AM on 12/23/2011
I think the students would be better served if the teacher were to say, "here are the traditional things that are associated with each gender role; and it's ok if you feel you fit that role, just as it's ok if you feel you don't fit that role."

It's great to have kids feel unrestrained by expectations and let them live "outside the box". But, we can't take away a part of society and a child's identity. If you're a girl, you can be a tomboy or a girly girl. You can be a girl who really feels like a boy; and maybe someday you will become a boy. You can be a masculine boy or a feminine boy.

But to eliminate all mention of gender is unrealistic and counterproductive, in my opinion.

I see on HuffPo, a lot, the mention that "gender is fluid". That may very well be. But one thing gender is not, is non-existent. And so I don't think pretending everyone is "neutral" is the way to go. Especially not to 6-year-olds.
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Conuly
02:09 PM on 12/24/2011
Please re-read the article.
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FaceTheTruth00
I'm a girl.
03:26 AM on 12/23/2011
I can agree with the author on some things, but not on others.

Boys can like to cook and girls can play with toy cars, etc. When I was little, I loved Barbie and My Little Pony, but I also played with matchbox cars; as well as sports with the boys.

So, I think it's fine to say that kids should not be made to conform to tightly woven gender roles.

However, what I don't agree with is the teacher deciding that using terms like "girls" and "boys" was somehow now wrong and must instead type them all neutrally as "students".

Sure it's great to tell kids that the can break out of the stereotypical gender roles. But, when you do things like decide using "boys" and "girls" and eliminate mention of gender at all, aren't you sending a message to kids who DO fit into the specific roles and are happy to do so?

Isn't it ok to be a girl and feel like a girl; to want to wear pretty clothes and want to do traditionally "girly" things?

There needs to be a balance, and I think by eliminating all mention of traditional gender types you are creating an imbalance. It's ok to say that not everyone has to fit that mold; but it's important to also say that there nothing wrong if you feel like you DO fit into that mold.
10:39 AM on 12/23/2011
FaceTheTruth00, you mention that you feel there needs to be balance. For gender atypical kids ranging from tomboys to trans girls, the adult world around them is heavily biased in the direction of an extremely rigid gender binary. What Melissa Bowlow Tempel is attempting to do is provide just a minute island where that is not so. Hardly the balance you are requesting, but it is a start.
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Conuly
02:10 PM on 12/24/2011
"Sure it's great to tell kids that the can break out of the stereotypi­cal gender roles. But, when you do things like decide using "boys" and "girls" and eliminate mention of gender at all, aren't you sending a message to kids who DO fit into the specific roles and are happy to do so?"

When you decide not to have your students line up according to religion, aren't you sending a message to kids who DO fit into their religion and are happy to do so?
11:28 PM on 12/22/2011
I'm a female and I'm starting to feel like I do maybe have some stuff in common with people in articles like this, that I've been reading recently. I wear masculine-looking clothes (because good outdoors clothing is always masculine...); I work in a male dominated field; the inside of my car looks like a guy lives in it. I wore cargo shorts and played in the woods for most of my childhood. I don't really care about makeup and I don't like to get dressed up. I guess my problem is...I'm starting to feel like a freak now, because I am absolutely as straight as they come and not even slightly gender-confused or whatever you call it. I am not trying to be a jerk, I just wish these articles would stop treating little girls who are interested in traditionally masculine things as though they're confused about their gender. I feel like if I was in school today I would be dragged to counseling and told it was okay to be a different gender than my body and made to read books in class about how everyone is different and special and we need to accept each other (true, that, but still) when all I ever was is a GIRL who happens to have 'masculine' interests.
11:38 PM on 12/22/2011
Never in this article did it state that such girls were "confused" about their gender. In fact, it explores concepts to facilitate the accepting or rejecting of traditionally gendered actions. It helps students realize that it's completely acceptable to not so much as to consider gender roles.
01:01 AM on 12/23/2011
The lessons were presented to the whole class and I never focused on Allie or even used her as an example or asked her to talk about anything. Every situation is different, and yours is very different from this one. I am honestly not trying to be rude(promise!) but if you read the article again maybe it will help. The point of the lesson was to make everyone more understanding and less judgmental, not more so.
10:29 PM on 12/22/2011
Being a straight female who has a range of interests, but having short hair and a relatively flat chest, wearing clothes which may not be particularly 'feminine' I am FREQUENTLY mistaken for a man. Until I speak of course. It happens with children; here I am all right with it as they have mostly not yet come to face such issues, and based on their own experiences, girls have long hair and boys have short hair. I tend to be more disappointed when it happens with adults...

But it just throws into view all of the stereotypes that people have about male and female, and it has made me that much more careful before I make assumptions about people's gender in public. I consider that a very positive thing. And I very much like the fact that there are people who express their genders in a variety of ways. Men should be men, if they so choose, and women women, but there is more to it than that, always.
08:18 PM on 12/22/2011
I not only believe that this article is fantastic, but I want to point out something noteworthy. I think it's interesting that the people who are in support of a gender-variant sensitive curriculum generally seem not only more well informed, but better writers who can clearly and coherently express their ideas. Just some food for thought. :)
08:27 PM on 12/22/2011
is this idea clear enough for you.....
why would anyone want to trust the education of there children to a person that is a hypocrite ( you understand that word i hope) that does not even practice what she preaches.

do you under stand any of these words or do you need to take her reading class?
08:46 PM on 12/22/2011
I think my other comments make it pretty darned clear that we're reading her words just fine, and it's not our problem if they're not the ones you want to hear.
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Conuly
02:11 PM on 12/24/2011
Way to prove soapstar's point!
08:30 PM on 12/22/2011
I just gave you a trick question, can you answer it?
11:34 PM on 12/22/2011
I don't even think you know what the definition of a trick question is based on your poor diction. You have not pointed out, to any degree, how you believe the woman is a hypocrite. She does in fact practice what she preaches every day and is just seeking to allow that ideal to permeate into the modern informed classroom. I would trust her any day over someone who had the apparent inability to write proper sentences. I really don't think you should be making gestures towards my inability to read. Not only is it rude and makes for a weak argument, but it highlights your own inability to rely on your intellect (given that there is any in the first place) for the purpose of constructive discourse.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Valerie Keefe
07:03 PM on 12/22/2011
Good article, though I cringe at 'biologically female' Last time I checked, the brain is biological.
08:20 PM on 12/22/2011
Valerie, the brain itself *is* biological. However, the thoughts of a person are separate from the physical brain. There are no such things as a "male" or "female" brain. It would then enforce the gender and sex binaries.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Valerie Keefe
08:46 PM on 12/22/2011
Sorry, but you need to look at the neurology.

And no, I don't believe in a gender binary. Gender is innate, and it's a two-gender-dominant system, but there are otherwise identified people for good reason. It's not a light switch, but if nothing else, we should stop conflating biology with birth-assignment.
08:25 PM on 12/22/2011
It may or may not have been inadvertent but I got the feeling that although Allie was gender variant, she wasn't trans. So in her case, biologically female would case accurately cover her limbs, torso, head *and* brain. She asked to be referred to as 'she' and a body and brain that is female. But she prefers male clothing. Sounds like someone my daughter would love to have as a neighbor or friend.
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Valerie Keefe
08:47 PM on 12/22/2011
Sure. And mine too. But my point is that she's using biological as short hand for cis, and yes, there's something both inaccurate and incorrect about that.
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Valerie Keefe
12:43 PM on 12/23/2011
Well, again, that's why I railed against Representative Frank's position on ENDA. Atypical gender presentation protections are important. If only so that a woman can't be fired for wearing pants or a man for shiny chapstick, (and their logical extensions, obviously).

I think what's happened to some extent is that you've taken in the typical radfem line about trans women: That we think that pink is still for girls and blue for boys and thus a girl who likes blue is really a boy and must be masculinized.

It's simply not true. And I know this, if for no other reason than that I am a makeup eschewing, beer-drinking, trans lesbian with way too much Weird Al on my playlist. And there are plenty of activists like me, in that they are wonderfully different in their own way.

Sex/gender is one thing. The ephemera around it, however, is a lot more constructed and performative (and can be fun if it's more freestyle than it has been.)

PS: I know I overuse this observation, but beer is flavoured with flowers and contains estrogen. How is it considered a man's drink?
03:30 PM on 12/22/2011
I think we need more teachers like Ms. Melissa. Way to go!
03:29 PM on 12/22/2011
I believe in your core message, but discussing the pluses and minuses of gender roles on the level you do may not be age appropriate.
08:21 PM on 12/22/2011
Then at what age would such a discussion be appropriate? After societal indoctrination? I fear by then it may be too late.
10:33 PM on 12/22/2011
Actually four to six or seven year olds are incredibly invested and interested in discussing gender roles on that level. That is the age bracket for the developmental stage when an individual not only realizes that they are separate but that they are unique, and they begin to mentally catalog the ways they are unique (and therefore the ways they fit into various groupings).
09:57 AM on 12/23/2011
Ok, if you say so. I teach middle school and have taught upper elementary a lot too, just sounded a little too mature to me. I will concede to more knowledgeable people about this.
01:45 PM on 12/22/2011
Acceptance should be the message, but I think the approach here is wrong. Ultimately, believing that differences are okay is what will result in a more accepting society in general. Telling the students it's normal for boys to wear make up because some rock star does it, or someone's uncle does it, only creates acceptance by what are often dishonest efforts, and moreover, don't solve the real problem. That being different doesn't deserve scorn.

Not it's not common for a girl to dress as a boy normally would to the point that the kids think her a boy. But as long as there is no deception, that's fine. She is different, but that's okay.
12:40 AM on 12/23/2011
We talked about how it's "OK" for boys to wear makeup or nail polish. I didn't use the word "normal" in my lessons at all because I don't get to decide what "normal" means, nor would I ever try to.
12:53 PM on 12/22/2011
If you don`t want your children brainwashed by government run public schools, home school them.
10:38 PM on 12/22/2011
I anecdotally agree. In our local area the schools were somewhat saturated with Christians that wished to proselytize to students as young as kindergarten. Gender variance of any sort was met by the most 'caring', benign-seeming but extremely harmful and shame-inducing intolerance. If our local school district had more teachers like the one that wrote this story there would be far less home schooled kids in our area.
12:12 PM on 12/22/2011
I agree with much of what you're teaching your students. However, if you think you're teaching them critical thinking, you're fooling yourself. They're six years old and the teacher is telling them that traditional gender roles are illogical and wrong. If you were really teaching them critical thinking, some of them would disagree with you and give their reasons for thinking differently. What you're doing, for better or for worse, is indoctrinating your students into your view of the world.
01:55 PM on 12/22/2011
Sorry. Teaching kids to accept and respect others and not to force others into pre-approved groups is a good thing.
03:09 PM on 12/22/2011
I totally agree with you, Ilisa. It's much like teaching that discrimination based on social class, generation, country of origin and sexual orientation are wrong. They are. A teacher can't say, "Students, it's up to you to believe whether or not slavery is right!" because there's obviously no question about its "rightness."
05:39 PM on 12/22/2011
so llisa because ellisha grey points out that this does not teach critical thinking you act like she said allowing kids to be there self is wrong?


so should i say because you agree with this teacher then you agree in pressuring girls to dress like boys because that is what the teacher admitted to doing with her own daughters....
12:01 PM on 12/22/2011
Ms. Melissa, I want to hug you. I wish I had had teachers like you. While I'm *relatively* gender normative, I have always preferred jeans to dresses and traditionally "boy" toys to traditionally "girl" toys. I was laughed at for asking for a Transformer for Christmas in first grade. I ended up pursuing computer science in college and was one of two girls in our department. It makes me so, so happy to know there are people like you encouraging kids like me to be who they are and love others for who they are as well.
12:43 AM on 12/23/2011
OMG! I also wanted a Transformer for Christmas when I was in first grade and I didn't get one but my best friend did. I didn't remember that until just now. Thank you so much for your kind words and congrats on persevering in a male dominated job.
09:40 AM on 12/22/2011
Reading this article warms me. There has been too many negative news about teachers and schools, and its articles like these that show that there are still teachers that still care and are willing to teach beyond the textbook and exams. Teachers have been so pressured to only churn out 'good grades' that they sometimes loose sight of the other material that needs to be taught, social life and acceptance. At a young age we were taught to be "kind, sharing, and accepting." This teacher reminds that their role in a school, and teacher is to teach the curriculum as well as important live lessons. This teacher is giving these students a lesson that has been pushed under the rug for too long, which is, 'Accepting differences'. I'm so sure if more teachers put similar social lessons there would be less bullying, less drop outs, more supportive parents and friends, happier students which leads to higher grades. Children make the world, what lessons they learn, they bring to society when they are older.
12:10 PM on 12/22/2011
are social life skills not learned every day when interacting with others, learning about life and ones self?
i have never seen a program that made a gay basher all of a sudden except a gay person. is one to really think this program is the best option over dealing with it case by case right then and there.. and why is it that as they sit by doing nothing about the bullying right in front of them, they try to make them self feel better about it by making a "program"?
like i stated before its as if one kid is failing in math, do we stop everyones progress to bring attention to learning disability's or should they help the kids case by case in areas they need help in?
10:13 PM on 12/22/2011
Dealing with it case by case is better than nothing, but it is like giving a band-aid to someone who is beat every day. Wouldn't it be better to stop the beating, if you know what the cause is?
10:56 PM on 12/22/2011
Please, I implore you to stop using words such as, "except" and "accept" if you cannot use them correctly. It undermines your argument.
01:57 PM on 12/22/2011
fanned and faved.