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Journal Article

Citation

Poteat VP, Calzo JP, Yoshikawa H, Rosenbach SB, Ceccolini CJ, Marx RA. Am. Educ. Res. J. 2019; 56(6): 2262-2294.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American Educational Research Association, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.3102/0002831219839033

PMID

34385714

Abstract

School-based extracurricular settings could promote dialogue on sociopolitical crises. We considered immigration discussions within Gender-Sexuality Alliances (GSAs), which address multiple systems of oppression. Among 361 youth and 58 advisors in 38 GSAs (19 in 2016-2017/Year 1; 19 in 2017-2018/Year 2), youth in Year 1 reported increased discussions from baseline throughout the remaining school year; differences were non-significant in Year 2. In both years, youth reporting greater self-efficacy to promote social justice, and GSAs with advisors reporting greater self-efficacy to address culture, race, and immigration discussed immigration more over the year (adjusting for baseline). In interviews, 38 youth described circumstances promoting or inhibiting discussions: demographic representation, open climates, critical reflection, fear or consequences of misspeaking, discomfort, agenda restrictions, and advisor roles.


Language: en

Keywords

Extracurricular groups; Gender-sexuality alliance; Immigration; LGBTQ youth; Social justice

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