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Just the Facts On Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Youth in Schools
Self-Realization
- Gay male adolescents report becoming aware of a distinct feeling of being different between ages 5-7; they also report that they did not yet connect this feeling to the issue of sexuality. [1]
- The median age at which lesbian and gay youth become aware that their feelings of difference are linked to a same-sex sexual orientation is 13. [2]
- 9% of high school students identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual or questioning. [3]
The School Climate
Student Attitudes
We were picked on. We were called queer and faggot and a host of other homophobic slurs. We were also used as punching bags by our classmates, just for being different.-- college student, remembering high school*
- 97% of students in public high schools report regularly hearing homophobic remarks from their peers. [4]
- The typical high school student hears anti-gay slurs 25.5 times a day. [5]
- 80% of gay and lesbian youth report severe social isolation. [6]
Staff Attitudes
I realize that children can be very cruel, but when teachers and adults encourage or do not discourage mean and cruel behavior it makes me angry and very sad. -- a parent of a gay child
- 53% of students report hearing homophobic comments made by school staff. [7]
- 80% of prospective teachers report negative attitudes toward gay and lesbian people. [8]
- 1/3 of prospective teachers can be classified as high-grade homophobes. [9]
- 52% of prospective teachers report that they would feel uncomfortable working with an openly lesbian or gay colleague. [10]
- 77% of prospective teachers would not encourage a class discussion on homosexuality; 85% oppose integrating gay/lesbian themes into their existing curricula. [11]
- Two-thirds of guidance counselors harbor negative feelings toward gay and lesbian people. [12]
- Less than 20% of guidance counselors have received any training on serving gay and lesbian students. [13]
- Only 25% of guidance counselors consider themselves highly competent in serving gay and lesbian youth. [14]
- Teachers fail to intervene in 97% of incidents involving anti-gay slurs at school. [15]
- 78% of school administrators say they know of no lesbian, gay or bisexual students in their schools, yet 94% of them claim they feel their schools are safe places for these young people. [16]
The Family
On reflecting about homosexuality, Ive learned that: my religious tradition taught me to believe that my son was a sinner; my medical support system taught me to believe that my son was sick; my educational system taught me that my son was abnormal; my legal system views my son and his partner in an unsanctioned relationship without legal rights and protection that are afforded my married daughter; my family, immediate and extended, provided no acknowledgment or support for having a gay relative in its midst; my major communication sources treated homosexuality as deviant. -- father of a gay son
- 28% of American households consist of married parents with biological children; 7% consist of married parents with children where a father works outside the home and the mother at home. [17]
- 19% of gay men and 25% of lesbians report suffering physical violence at the hands of a family members as a result of their sexual orientation. [18]
- 11.5 % of gay and lesbian youth report being physically attacked by family members. [19]
- 26% of adolescent gay males report having to leave home as a result of conflicts with their family over their sexual orientation. [20]
- 42% of homeless youth self-identify as gay/lesbian. [21]
Anti-Gay Violence and Harassment
I just began hating myself more and more, as each year the hatred towards me grew and escalated from just simple name-calling in elementary school to having persons in high school threaten to beat me up, being pushed and dragged around the ground, having hands slammed in lockers, and a number of other daily tortures. --a gay male high school student
- Homosexuals are probably the most frequent victims [of hate crimes] in the U.S. [22]
- 45% of gay males and 20% of lesbians report having experienced verbal harassment and/or physical violence as a result of their sexual orientation during high school. [23]
- 19% of gay/lesbian youth report suffering physical attacks based on their sexual orientation. [24]
- 15% of lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) youth have been injured so badly in a physical attack at school that they have had to seek the services of a doctor or nurse. [25]
- 20% of LGB youth report skipping school at least once a month because of feeling unsafe while there. [22]
- 42% of adolescent lesbians and 34% of adolescent gay males who have suffered physical attack also attempt suicide. [21]
Health Issues
Due to societal fear and ignorance, my teachers and counselors labeled my confusion as rebellion, and placed me in the category of a troubled discipline problem. But still I had nothing to identify with and no role models to guide me, to help me sort out this confusion, and I began to believe that I was simply alone. A few weeks into my sophomore year, I woke up in a psych hospital after taking my fathers camping knife violently to my wrists and hoping for success. --lesbian student
- 1 in 5 HIV-positive men were apparently infected during their adolescent years. [28]
- 68% of adolescent gay males use alcohol (26% or more at least once a week); 44% use other drugs. [29]
- 83% of adolescent lesbians use alcohol and 56% use other drugs. [30]
- 31% of LGB students have used cocaine as opposed to 7% of non-LGB students. [31]
- 62% of LGB students smoke as opposed to 35% of non-LGB students. [32]
- 32% of LGB students have gotten pregnant or gotten someone pregnant as opposed to 12% of non-LGB students. [33]
- 30% of gay and bisexual adolescent males attempt suicide at least once. [34]
- Gay and lesbian youth represent 30% of all completed teen suicides: extrapolation shows this means a successful suicide attempt by a gay teen every 5 hours and 48 minutes. [35]
- LGB students are four times more likely to attempt suicide than non-LGB students. [36]
References and Additional Information
* Testimonies are from the public hearings conducted by the Massachusetts Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth, 1992. Governor William Weld, R-MA.
- Treadway L. and Yoakum J. Creating a Safer School Environment for Lesbian and Gay Students in: Journal of School Health, September 1992.
- Sears J. Growing Up Gay in the South. New York: Harrington Park Press, 1991.
- Seattle Public Schools, 1995 Seattle Teen Health Risk Survey, reprinted in Third Annual Report of the Safe Schools Anti-Violence Documentation Project, 1996.
- Making Schools Safe for Gay and Lesbian Youth: Report of the Massachusetts Governors Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth, 1993.
- Carter K. Gay Slurs Abound, in The Des Moines Register, March 7, 1997, p. 1.
- Hetrick E., and Martin A. D. Developmental Issues and Their Resolution for Gay and Lesbian Adolescents in: Journal of Homosexuality, 1987.
- Making Schools Safe for Gay and Lesbian Youth: Report of the Massachusetts Governors Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth, 1993
- Sears, James. Educators, Homosexuality, and Homosexual Students: Are Personal Feelings Related to Professional Beliefs? in Harbeck, Karen, ed. Coming Out of the Classroom Closet. New York: Harrington Park Press, 1992.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- Price, J. H. and Telljohan S. School Counselors Perceptions of Adolescent Homosexuals in: Journal of School Health, December 1991.
- Carter K. Gay Slurs Abound, in The Des Moines Register, March 7, 1997, p. 1.
- GLSEN/Detroit, Bruised Bodies, Bruised Spirits: An Assessment of the Current Climate of Safety for Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Youth in Southeastern Michigan Schools, pp. 31-33.
- 1990 U.S. Census Report.
- Philadelphia Lesbian and Gay Task Force, Discrimination and Violence toward Lesbian Women and Gay Men in Philadelphia and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1992.
- Hetrick-Martin Institute Violence Report, 1988.
- Remafedi G. Male Homosexuality: The Adolescent's Perspective, in: Pediatrics, 1987.
- Victim Services/Travelers Aid, Streetwork Project Study, 1991.
- U.S. Department of Justice, The Response of the Criminal Justice System to Bias Crime: An Exploratory View, 1987.
- National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, National Anti-Gay/Lesbian Victimization Report, 1984.
- Hetrick-Martin Institute Violence Report, 1988.
- Seattle Public Schools, 1995 Seattle Teen Health Risk Survey, reprinted in Third Annual Report of the Safe Schools Anti-Violence Documentation Project, 1996.
- The Centers for Disease Control and the Massachusetts Department of Education, The Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 1995.
- Hetrick-Martin Institute Violence Report, 1988.
- Centers for Disease Control figures, 1995.
- Hunter J. et al. Unpublished research by the Columbia University HIV Center for Clinical and Behavior Studies, 1992.
- ibid.
- The Centers for Disease Control and the Massachusetts Department of Education, The Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 1995.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- Remafedi G., et al. Risk Factors for Attempted Suicide in Gay and Bisexual Youth, in: Pediatrics, 1991.
- Gibson P. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretarys Task Force on Youth Suicide Report, 1989. See also Remafedi G. Death by Denial: Studies of Gay and Lesbian Youth Suicide (Boston: Alyson Publications, 1995).
- The Centers for Disease Control and the Massachusetts Department of Education, The Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 1995.
1998 Copyright ©, GLSEN
Planned Parenthood of CT and GLSEN CT have created an excellent resource module for educators called Tackling Gay Issues in School.
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