For this week’s article I chose to do the quotes
option as my blog. My quotes are from the first section because as much as I enjoyed
the entire article I felt the second part about HOW to integrate LGBT topics into
society wasn’t as powerful as the part about WHY we need to integrate them into
society. Actually my quotes are within the first five pages…awk. But out of all
the ones I highlighted they really were my favorite.
Quote 1: “Heterosexism is one of those unexamined
avenues of privilege. Assumptions that everyone is (or should be) heterosexual
shape most classroom interactions, whether academic or social.” (84)
We talked a lot about privilege in class and
SCWAAMP, which really applies to this quote that heterosexual is “the norm” in
classrooms. People just assume that everyone is straight and that is what is
integrated into lessons and to discussion topics. This is essentially the root
of the problem, that everyone takes the assumed straight root and avoids all
other topics.
Quote 2: “Youth who see themselves as wise or
powerful main characters or heroes worthy of celebration and emulation will
feel validated, included, and safe inside their classrooms. LGBT youth rarely
have this experience.” (85)
Students who are white, straight, men are probably
more validated than anyone else, I think. All but one of our presidents was a
white male, and they’re all straight. God forbid we have a gay superhero!
Straight people are shown as the powers of this world. If teachers brought in
people in the world who are powerful and a part of the LGBT community those
students could feel included as a part of this world.
Quote 3: “They teach their students the status quo;
they shrink from challenging dominant social patterns and expectation,
especially in relation to sexual orientation or gender identity.” (85-86)
WHY IS EVERYONE SO SHY WHEN IT COMES CHALLENGING
POWER? Why can’t we ever stray from what is normal? Why is that so damn bad?
Teachers are only teaching things that involve heterosexuality because they do
not want to tap on the glass of their students perfect, unseen panels. If every
teacher integrated something other than straightness into curriculum, and just
normal discussions with students it wouldn’t seem so foreign but we shy away
from that because most people don’t know how to talk about it.

On a side note I thought the little story about the
two male penguins at the zoo who raised an abandoned egg on their own was
adorable. And the fact that the Secretary of Education told PBS to pull the
episode involving two gay moms from its lineup because “Many parents would not
want their young children exposed to the life-styles portrayed in this episode”
(86) actually infuriates the crap out of me. Kids don’t understand what
lesbians are they just see two moms and either ask why they don’t have a dad or
it just goes right over their heads. Exposure to this type of relationship just
reinforces that acceptance in a child’s mind. Some parents are just too thick
headed to even fathom that there are different people is this world. If the
parents refuse to explain this to their kids, and the teachers aren’t, and TV
isn’t allowed to either, who the hell is going to show children that acceptance
and understanding differences is crucial?!