Thursday, April 28, 2011

GSAs

This year my school started our first ever Gay-Straight Alliance, instead of just calling it the GSA we decide to give it an actual name. My co-leader came up with the name True Colors and we ran with it. The thing is we go to a super small charter school. 68 students’ grades 7-12 small. In the beginning we decided that we were going to keep ourselves and the GSA a secret. Only the school staff and the students in the group knew about the meetings True Colors. Three other students and I would leave school at 2:30 every Thursday and meet outside of school.  We did this every week for a few months, than we as a group decided we wanted to become an actual GSA, like with straight allies. That’s when we decide to move our meetings into school and open the meeting to the whole school. We now have been meeting for a few months and we have about ten members in our group which is amazing for such a small school. The main thing True Colors has done is our Breakfast Fundraiser, we made breakfast and charged three dollars per person, it went over really well and ended up making over $70. We used the money to buy Day of Silence buttons.  The 2009 National School Climate Survey found that students in schools with GSA heard fewer homophobic remarks like “faggot” or “dyke” and fewer expressions where “gay” was used in a negative way than schools without GSAs. They also found that students with a GSA to attend felt a greater sense of connectedness to their school community than students without a GSA. I have found that having True Colors has made my school a better places, and our members are happy that they have a place to learn and talk about LGBT issues. If your having a hard time starting a GSA or have one that is not being treated the same way as the other non-curricular club look up the Equal Access Act. It’s the a law that protects GSAs.

Have a Great Day! 

Love Stephanie

1 comment:

  1. That is awesome Steph!! You are doing great things!!!

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