ABSTRACT

Gender identity and sexuality play crucial roles in the educational experiences of students, parents, and teachers. Teacher education must more directly address the ways that schools reflect and reproduce oppressive gender norms, working to combat homophobia, transphobia, heteronormativity, and gendered expectations in schools. This volume examines teacher candidates’ experiences with gender and sexuality in the classroom, offering insight and strategies to better prepare teachers and teacher educators to support LGBTQ youth and families.

This volume addresses the need for broader, more in-depth qualitative data describing teacher candidates’ responses to diversity in the classroom (including gender, sexuality, race, class and religion). By using pedagogical tools such as narrative writing and positioning theory, teacher candidates explore these issues to better understand their own students’ narratives in deeply embodied ways. This book calls for schools to be places where oppression, in all its complexity, is explored and challenged rather than replicated.

chapter 1|23 pages

Why This Course? Why This Book?

chapter 2|13 pages

The Course

Transforming Belief Into Action

chapter 3|23 pages

“I Thought of Myself as Neutral in Some Ways, and Then Them as Other Things”

Recognizing and Challenging Heteronormativity

chapter 4|30 pages

“It's Hard to Wrap Your Mind Around”

Teacher Candidates' Discourse Concerning Gender Identity

chapter 5|32 pages

“Perhaps I Am Not as Open-minded as I Thought”

Religion and Sexuality

chapter 6|24 pages

“Knowing the Unknowingness at the Core of What We Know” 1

Queered Teaching

chapter 7|29 pages

“Was I Supposed to Just Continue With My Lesson?”

Working Within and Around Constraints in Schools and Developing Teacher Agency

chapter 8|20 pages

Conclusions