Report / In Depth

Supporting LGBTQ-Inclusive Teaching

How Open Digital Materials Can Help

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Abstract

This report is aimed at opening up a new line of dialogue about today’s teacher experiences so that efforts to make lessons inclusive of LGBTQ students are embraced instead of squashed. The first report of its kind to examine the possibilities inherent in LGBTQ-inclusive materials for training classroom teachers, it explores the biggest challenges to creating, implementing, and scaling up this kind of PreK–12 teacher professional learning. It is also the first to consider the opportunities in harnessing digital materials, particularly open educational resources, as tools for helping to overcome those challenges and enabling queer inclusion. Situated within the broader context of culturally responsive teaching, this report aims to help set a research and practice agenda for education leaders that envisions ways to combine lessons learned from both the LGBTQ advocacy and open education fields.

Acknowledgments

Special thanks to Mo Nyamweya and Zac Chase for reviewing drafts of this paper. I also appreciate New America colleagues Sabrina Detlef, Lisa Guernsey, Kristina Ishmael, and Elena Silva for their editorial support, as well as Riker Pasterkiewicz, Julie Brosnan, Maria Elkin, and Naomi Morduch Toubman for their graphics and communications support. This report would not have been possible without the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, which is a generous supporter of the work of New America's Teaching, Learning, and Tech team. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation.

More About the Authors

Sabia Prescott
Sabia Prescott
Supporting LGBTQ-Inclusive Teaching

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