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Fall 2013 Special Issue - Call for Papers & Editors

 SPRINKLE - CALL FOR PAPERS - DEADLINE APRIL 15, 2013
 
Sprinkle, a peer-reviewed, undergraduate Sexual Diversity Studies journal, seeks academic submissions for Fall 2013 edition. Papers should be 1500-2000 words in length and show critical engagement with contemporary feminist issues with an emphasis on law and policy implications.
 

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2013 Sprinkle Call for Papers

 Please visit the Sprinkle facebook page for updated information about the upcoming issue:
 

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Queering the Academy: Doing LGBTQI and Ally work in the Ph.D. program and beyond

So, as you can see from my previous blog post, AERA 2012 in Vancouver was jam-packed with great moments. It really was an amazing conference. I want to dedicate this entry to a particular panel that I was invited to be on by Cathy Rosenberg and the Graduate Student Council. She organized a Fireside Chat (which at AERA is an opportunity for a more informal dialogue about current topics that isn't a standard research presentation). In this fireside chat was a panel of some pretty amazing scholars that I was thrilled to be associated with: Mollie Blackburn, Erica Meiners, Kevin Kumashiro, and SJ Miller.

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Highlights from Vancouver educational research conference - #AERA2012

I am sitting in the Vancouver airport getting ready to board my flight back to the U.S. and wanted to share some reflections on an amazing and rejuvenating conference before I get swept back into the daily life back at my home institution. Every day was so full of great interactions, exciting new research, and glorious views that it is hard to sift through it all and pick the best of the best! But here's my attempt at it  -- and I am using long term impact on the field and my own praxis as my primary lens for sorting.

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Should teachers be disciplined for online lives?

I just finished a radio interview with NPR's 'Talk of the Nation' on this topic in response to a recent L.A. Times op-ed on the issue of 'Teachers under the morality microscope'. A law professor, Jonathan Turley, wrote that teachers shouldn't be disciplined for 'legal' behavior that is posted online (drinking alcohol, bridal showers at a strip club, posting rants about their students or same-sex marraige).

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“All the Cool Girls are Lesbians” - T-shirt controversies in schools

You may have heard about a recent T-shirt controversy in a Massachusetts high school. In case you missed it, a 10th grader wore a shirt that said "all the cool girls are lesbians" and was asked to cover it and not wear it to school again. In my latest blog post on Psychology Today, I explore the limits of student expression in school.

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Why are you on Twitter?

"Why are you on Twitter?" I get asked this question all the time. Most of my friends and colleagues tell me that they’ve tried it, but they don’t get it. Or they tell me, “I don’t care if someone had a tuna sandwich for lunch, what’s the point?” I’m writing this post to help folks think about ways that Twitter might be able to work for you. There are 5 main reasons why I find Twitter a useful tool – I expand on each below with some examples and names of folks who you might want to start by following as well. I’m also providing a glossary of twitter symbols and abbreviations to help you get started if you decide to set up an account and join the twitterverse!

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April 7 event: Gender, sexuality, and inclusion

 

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Family values: Whose families? whose values?

So I recently wrote my representatives asking for them to support the Uniting American Families Act as part of immigration reform. I have a major personal investment in this legislation if I ever want to move back to the U.S. with my family intact as it would allow U.S. citizens to sponsor their same-sex partners for the purposes of immigration.  Currently the Defense of Marriage Act prevents this from happening. I just got an email back from one of my reps this morning. This was his reply:
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Dr. Meyer,
Thank you for contacting me regarding the importance of the family. I appreciate the opportunity to learn of your views.

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Call for gender-neutral bathrooms at AERA 2011 annual meeting

Dear Readers:
I am posting here a copy of a letter that we have recently sent to the AERA leadership requesting that they make gender-neutral bathrooms available in each conference site during the 2011 meeting in New Orleans. They have responded positively and are "looking into it." We are pleased that they are taking this request seriously and are hoping to have this request accomodated. I decided to post the full text of the letter here in case others would like to make similar requests of other professional meetings that they attend. This is not just an issue for transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals, but as you see in the letter it makes the conference more accessible for many others as well. Read on and let me know what you think...

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Double standard for U.S. citizenship

 Okay, so I'm going to dust off this blog because I am really upset at the U.S. government right now. *deep breath* I’m going to try and slow down and make this coherent…

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Long-haired boy subjected to harassment at school -- by his TEACHERS ?!

I just read another news story about a young boy who was harassed at school because he had long hair. Unfortunately, in this case it is allegedly his teachers who were responsible for the harassment. According to the news story at Cincinnati.com the teachers would attempt to humiliate him by putting his hair in ponytails, parading him in front of other classes with this hairstyle, and calling him by "feminized versions of his name."

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Homophobia in Canadian schools - podcast

I am just posting a brief entry to share with you a very interesting podcast done on the topic of homophobia in Canadian high schools. This was a graduate student project that I was interviewed for, and I think the final product is quite interesting and well done. The focus is on one student who filed a human rights complaint against his school and used the financial award from that case to start up an diversity education initiative called Jer's Vision.

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High school teacher suspended after assigning an article on homosexuality in animals

Yesterday, Mr. Delong, a 10th and 12th grade Honors English teacher in Piasa, IL was suspended for assigning an article about homosexuality in the animal kingdom to his students. You can read the full article here. The local paper reporting this story quoted the teacher saying, "I have been suspended, but not without pay," Delong, of Carlinville, said Wednesday.

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Scholastic censors same-sex families from book fairs

 According to the School Library Journal, Scholastic books is asking Lauren Myracle, the author of the new book "Luv Ya Bunches" to rewrite her story to exclude one of the character's parents because they are gay. The author is willing to clean up some of the "objectionable" language (words like "crap" and "sucks"), but refuses to de-gay the story since it reflects modern families. I'm so proud of Ms.

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An open thank-you letter to my teachers: 20 years later

Dear Mr. Wilson & Mr. Katzman: I am not quite sure how to start this letter other than to let you know that I recently received an email from a former student of mine, and it made me wonder if I had ever written to you to thank you for the lessons I learned in your class. I was a student in your American Studies class during the 1987-1988 school year.

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A teacher's joy: Letter from a student 10 years later

Echoes and impacts of teaching critically: have you told a favorite teacher about how s/he impacted you?

Yesterday I got an email from a student I taught 10 years ago.  She took French from me in 9th grade when I was teaching at a private boarding school in the U.S.  I remember her well because she was bright, motivated, hard-working and I also taught her older brother.  I had run into her and her mom in a bookstore a few years ago when I was back visiting friends and it was wonderful to see her and get back in touch.  She was on her way to live and study in Jordan for the year.  Yesterday's email informed me that she was back in the states and got a job teaching Arabic at a high school in Massachussetts. 

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GLBTQ online high school: Solution or segregation? Can separate be equal?

Last week an announcement went out online informing the world of a new school available to GLBTQ youth everywhere: a virtual school "Where you can get a high quality education while receiving comprehensive support from adults and peers." This announcement was greeted by some bloggers with joy, but by many with ambivalence.  This has been the reaction anytime there has been a discussion of similar face-to-face schools for queer youth that are currently established in Toronto and NYC.  Some arguments against such programs say that they deprive students of important socialization experiences or puts them in a fake supportive bubble that doesn't prepare them for the "real world." 

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Safe Schools Improvement Act of 2009 - status update

Siredeaner Walker, Carl Walker-Hoover's mom, testified  before 2 congressional sub-committees on July 8 on the Safe Schools Improvement Act

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I just saw BRUNO: 10% clever, 25% funny, 50% vulgar, 15% dangerous = 100% OUTRAGEOUS

Well, I finally went to see "Bruno" last night because I really just wanted to form my own opinion on the film.  I'd read all about the controversies and wanted to decide for myself.  I'd also been reading reviews saying it was: hilarious, outrageous, brilliant, uncomfortable, offensive, and unsettling.  I have to agree a little bit with everyo

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More gender-regulating in schools: TX district wants Apache boy to cut his long hair

Well, I can't say that I'm surprised that this news item is coming out of the state of Texas.  The place where football players are kings and their cheerleading counterparts are crowned queens.  Literally.

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Maine rules in favor of trans girl in human rights complaint against her school

Goodness - this came out of nowhere!  I had no idea such an important case was brewing in quiet old Maine.  Here is the news bit from the Bangor Daily News (pronounced - "Bane- gore" NOT "bang 'er")

The short summary is that a 5th grader who identifies as a girl was harassed in the girls washroom (by a boy who followed her in and called her "faggot"), so the school assigned her to the faculty single-user washroom which was at the opposite end of the school from her classroom.  The family didn't approve of this solution and filed a complaint with the Maine Human Rights Commission

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New report on cybersafety and "sexting"

So Cox communications has released their annual report on cyber-safety.  Some of their key findings that they present include:

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Straitlaced - an exciting new documentary on gender roles

 Wow, Debra Chasnoff has done it again.  From the brilliant documentary filmmaker who brought us "It's Elementary" "That's a Family" and "Let's Get Real", she has turned her lens on the issue of gender role expectations and how homophobia impacts how kids grow up and learn to fit into narrow concepts of man/woman and by default gay/straight.  I have only viewed excerpts, but based on her previous work and the content of the interviews I just read (http://www.edgenewyork.com/index.phpch=entertainment&sc=movies&sc2=features

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Gendertopia in Vermont & $25k settlement in California

I'm excited to be writing about a new program that is partially funded by the Burlington School District that supports a flexible and open exploration of gender diversity in the context of teen lives.  It is being run by Outright Vermont, a local social service agency, in conjunction with the local school district. One of the program's organizers explained,

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