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By Wyatt Otto, Content Manager With TikTok growing to become the most popular platform for traditional college students (age 18-22), more colleges are joining the platform to better connect to… Read More – So Your College is on TikTok, Now What?
Blog June 09, 2021
In honor of Pride month, it’s only appropriate to talk about how community colleges can best support LGBTQ+ students on campus. Whether it’s providing resources or creating safe spaces, here’s our tips for creating a more inviting and safe campus for your LGBTQ+ students.
Establishing your pronouns is a great way to build inclusion because it invites others to tell you their pronouns and create a space where everyone’s gender identity is recognized and respected. There’s a few ways you can go about this:
TLDR: The best way to ask someone their pronouns is by simply asking “What are your pronouns?”
Having an LGBTQ+ organization on campus is the best way to support students. One that’s open all the time and has an administrator in charge is best, but just having an LGBTQ+ club with an advisor works as well. Having a center or a group where students can meet and have a safe space to express themselves can be extremely helpful for LGBTQ+ students to feel supported on campus.
Having an LGBTQ+ center on campus with a professional advisor can help give students the resources and support they need to succeed while in school. Services such as mental health resources, contraceptives, support networks, and scholarships are often provided at these centers.
LGBTQ+ clubs work similarly, having weekly or monthly meetings where students gather to discuss LGBTQ+ issues, organize events, and just meet up to give each other support and encouragement. These can easily be formed by students by asking for a professor or administrator to agree to be in charge of the club and help them organize meetings and events.
A growing trend in schools of all grades across the nation has been the use of a safe space sticker on classroom and office doors. Stickers like the one pictured above tell students that your classroom, office, or school entirely is a space where they are free to be themselves and will be respected by the faculty.
Many educators put these outside their doors as a sign that students can come to them with issues they’re facing in the classroom or their daily lives and find help. Whether they’re being bullied or disrespected by a fellow student or struggling to complete assignments because of an unsafe home life, it can be quite a lifeline to have a space where they can present these issues to their teachers and get the support in their education that they need.
Having an ally by their side can help students gain the resources they need and stay focused on obtaining their degree, so make it easy for them to know that you’re there for them.
Overall, being loud and proud allies is the best thing you can do for your LGBTQ+ students. Some students may not take advantage of these resources because they might not need them, but for the students that do, it can be the difference between dropping out and finishing their degrees.
By Wyatt Otto, Content Manager With TikTok growing to become the most popular platform for traditional college students (age 18-22), more colleges are joining the platform to better connect to… Read More – So Your College is on TikTok, Now What?
We’re all familiar with she/her and he/him pronouns, but there’s a third set of pronouns that we need to become more familiar with, and that’s singular they/them pronouns.
In an interview with Paula Di Dio, Ph.D. in Latin American literature and cultural studies and senior director of communications & research strategist at Interact, we break down how best to communicate with Latino and Hispanic students.
Read More – Writing and Marketing to Latino and Hispanic Students