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Teachers are outing trans students thanks to states new Dont Say Gay law
The grim consequences for transgender students in Texas are coming into focus three months after the states sweeping new Dont Say Gay legislation went into effect in September.Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed the so-called Bill of Parental Rights in June, a draconian right-wing wishlist of MAGA priorities banning discussion of LGBTQ+ identity and race in classrooms, shutting down gay-straight student alliances (GSAs) on school campuses, and explicitly prohibiting school staff from supporting trans students, alongside other restrictive measures. Related Texas students sue over unsafe & unjust Dont Say Gay law that bans GSAs The prohibitions around social transition mean kids known to their classmates and teachers by their preferred name and identity for years are now being deadnamed and forced to assume an identity theyd abandoned long ago.Ethan Brignac, a trans student at Wylie East High School northeast of Dallas, has been known by his chosen name since seventh grade. With the new legislation in effect, the high school senior lobbied teachers to continue using it. Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today In the first week of school, when I was kind of trying to convince my teachers to call me Ethan, I was like, Hey, look, its still on my ID.Then one of my teachers this year said, Okay, theyre gonna fix that soon.Three weeks later, school administrators called him to the library and gave him a new ID. Ethan was now officially identified by his deadname.He says some teachers seem to make a point of working his legal name into every interaction, he told the Texas Tribune, outing him to peers and rekindling the dread he felt in his time before Ethan.It was definitely a big change having my deadname kind of sprawled everywhere, he said, It was like, wow, okay, that wasnt just a social media post I saw, this is real life.A school spokesperson confirmed the change was to ensure full compliance with state law, including Senate Bill 12.In the Leander school district north of Austin, faculty may continue to call students by their preferred name, if it was done prior to SB 12s implementation. But for new students, the use of their chosen names and pronouns is banned. Parents can request a name change, but those updates are only allowed if theyre unrelated to social transitioning, said Conner Carlow, a classroom support specialist in the district. Carlow grappled with his own sexuality as a middle schooler and recalled how hard it was.I wasnt telling my parents what was going on, so I imagine these kids arent either, Carlow said. The fact theyre willing to tell us before even the parents is a big deal, and now the fact that we have to just not accept them, I mean, its awful.The school board in Conroe, Texas, north of Houston, was among the first in Texas to bar teachers from using gender-affirming names and pronouns.At Woodlands High School in the district, junior Cassie Hilborn had planned to come out as trans, but the onslaught of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation stripped her of her confidence, she says. It feels like every day I look at the news and then the headline just reads, Sorry, more things youve lost.Cassie takes refuge at the schools Dungeons & Dragons club, where classmates and a faculty adviser call her by her chosen name. She lodges a small protest against SB 12 by hiding the deadname on her school ID under blue masking tape.But Cassie remains discouraged, she said.Now, even teachers that might have respected my identity have been told that they unequivocally are not allowed to do so, Cassie said. Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.
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