1 / 22

Developing a Safe Space Program to Create an Allies Network for LGBT students and Staff

Developing a Safe Space Program to Create an Allies Network for LGBT students and Staff. Melissa Fallon, PhD SUNY College at Oneonta. SUNY College at Oneonta . Who are we 5,878 full- and part-time students, 1000 employees 10% AALANA Liberal Arts. Diversity at Oneonta: Current Initiatives.

adair
Télécharger la présentation

Developing a Safe Space Program to Create an Allies Network for LGBT students and Staff

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developing a Safe Space Program to Create an Allies Network for LGBT students and Staff Melissa Fallon, PhD SUNY College at Oneonta

  2. SUNY College at Oneonta • Who are we • 5,878 full- and part-time students, 1000 employees • 10% AALANA • Liberal Arts

  3. Diversity at Oneonta: Current Initiatives • Creation President’s Council on Diversity (2003) • Statement on Diversity (December 2004) • Climate for Diversity (November 2005) • Creation of the Bias Incident Protocol (December 2005) • GSRC director position created • Strategic Plan for Diversity and Inclusion (2008)

  4. National College Climate SurveyRankin, 2005 • 19% reported that, within the past year, they had feared for their physical safety • 51% concealed their sexual orientation/gender identity to avoid intimidation. • 34% avoided disclosing their sexual orientation/gender identity to an instructor, teaching assistant, administrator, or supervisor within the past year due to a fear of negative consequences, harassment, or discrimination. • GLBT people of color were more likely than white GLBT people to conceal their sexual orientation or gender identity to avoid harassment.

  5. National College Climate SurveyRankin, 2005 • Transgender persons were rated most likely to be harassed on campus (71%), followed by gay individuals (61%) and lesbians (53%.) • 73% of faculty, 74% students, 81% administrators, and 73% staff rated the campus climate as homophobic.

  6. National College Climate SurveyRankin, 2005 Percent of respondents that Experienced Harassment (within the past year) • 36% of Undergraduate Student • 23% of Graduate/Professional Student • 19% of Staff • 27% of Faculty

  7. College at OneontaClimate Study • President Donovan commissions study with Sue Rankin and Associates • 1,700 responded to online survey • Survey assessed personal experiences and observed behavior • Study was used to inform strategic plan for diversity and inclusion

  8. Respondents by Sexual Orientation & Position (n)

  9. Personally Experienced Offensive, Hostile, or Intimidating Conduct by Sexual Orientation (%)

  10. Observed Harassment by Sexual Orientation (%)

  11. Null Environment • There is no such thing as a null environment. • Environments that don’t communicate disagreement with cultural stigma are seen as endorsing the stigma. • Safe Space program as a way to have a visible disagreement with the cultural stigma and support for Allies.

  12. Sociopolitical context for sexual orientation • Cultural stigma provides information about where the stigma comes from but also explains internal homophobia • Assumptions of Hetero-normativity lead to invisibility for the LGBT community and keep LGBT students isolated • Helps explain why Allies need support and community/network.

  13. Safe Space Nuts and Bolts • Collaboration effort: Counseling Ctr, Residence life, Multicultural Student Affairs, Women’s Studies, Open Minded Unity • Committee and work group structure • Curriculum • Marketing • Manual • Evaluations

  14. Safe SpaceMarketing work group • Developed Symbol • Developed “Look for it” flyer • Brochure with workshop dates, info • Distribute within halls, buildings, bulletin • Personal invites to area leaders*

  15. Safe Space Curriculum work group • Did the research • Developed a wish list • Made it fit • 2 day/ 5 hours • *Trainers developed original curriculum • Curriculum revisions • Trainer’s manual and train-the trainer workshops

  16. Safe SpaceManual group • Handouts • Workshop agendas • Local, state, and national resources • Ally tools/ info • College resources (ie: non discrimination policy, bias incident protocol)

  17. Safe Space Politics • Hop-on momentum that’s already there • Invited stakeholders AND critics • Empowered critics by inviting feedback and direct involvement • Fitting into/ leveraging support from existent initiatives • Social justice/ community education • Political leveraging/ senior admin

  18. Safe SpaceDomino Effect • Employees feeling safe/ empowering others (staff and students) • Students self- identifying as Allies and GLBTQ • More open discussion about lack of acceptance/ hostile campus environments • Development of informal support network led to decreased isolation for employees • Now Safe Space is used as an admissions recruiting tool

  19. Safe Space Surprises • Support from management • Safe Space venue for coming out • Institutionalizing awareness of program (ie: new employee orientation) • Community interest

  20. Safe SpaceChallenges • LGBT faculty critics undermined project as “surface” or “fluff” • Curriculum and balancing comprehensiveness with time • “Mandatory” policy • Judicial sanction • Time intensive • Death by details

  21. Subsequent Stepsfor Oneonta Safe Space • One hour presentation to manage interest in professional development • Building and maintaining a network • Listserv • Website • Action hero day • Transgender student issues – Transgender guide to campus • Recruiting trainers • Development of manual

  22. Melissa Fallon, PhD, Counseling Centerfallonma@oneonta.eduRobin Nussbaum PhD, Gender & Sexuality Resource Center CoordinatorNussbar@oneonta.edu

More Related