Ep 63 – Supporting LGBTQ+ students

The Brownell Biology Education Research Group at Arizona State University is a team of dedicated biology education researchers studying ways to make undergraduate biology more inclusive.

Find out more about their research here.

In what ways are LGBTQ+ identities relevant in a STEM subject like biology?

“We’re trying to help students see themselves in a potential career.”

Interventions are often measured against producing some improvement in learning, but equally important as academic achievement is to what extent do students feel they belong in a discipline. Education is not just about grades. It is also about helping students see themselves continuing on in a particular field.

It is increasingly clear that science is not 100% objective. Who does the science has an impact on how the science is done, how how things are interpreted, and the conclusions what are eventually made. Diverse teams bring more different perspectives. Diverse teams tend to produce better results because that diversity can mitigate the impact of individual biases.

Are there particular challenges for LGBTQ+ individuals in STEM subjects and in biology?

In biology, LGBTQ+ identities intersect with the content. In biology most of this is in the context of HIV and AIDS. The subject can also be taught in a very heteronormative way, ignoring the diversity in behaviour and reproductive biology in other animals.

Being out to your class and the benefits for students

Coming out to a class humanizes the instructor and improves:

  • students’ willingness to approach the instructor
  • feeling connected to the instructor
  • confidence in pursuing a science career
  • sense of belonging in the class
  • sense of belonging within the scientific community.

The duckling effect: Seeing others in the field who are able to be themselves can help LGBTQ+ young people find their way to water.

Recommendations for teaching biology in more inclusive ways

Think about the language used

Using humor

Humour based on science or the subject matter is least likely to be offensive. Also jokes based on television or food.

Jokes don’t need to be funny, or make students laugh every time, in order to be effective at humanising the instructor, improving learning, or improving the student-instructor relationship. Student’s appreciate the attempt.

Avoid using humour based on identity. Jokes are based on subverting stereotypes (if something is funny because it is not what is expected) can have the effect of reinforcing binaries. Even self-depricating humour can be counterproductive when there are students who share the same characteristics.

Be purposeful about active learning practises

Consider if all elements of group work are the best option for student learning. Sometimes instructors may tell students to work in a group purely as a time or resource saving exercise. Working through a worksheet as a group saves paper, but takes away the option of students working independently if that is what they would prefer. Offer every member of a group the sheet means they can work on their own or with the group.

“Pair-and-share” and other methods of allowing students to confer before responding to a question reduces anxiety by giving students time to think, listen to other ideas, and formulate an answer. It also takes the pressure off any individual student

Active Learning Continuum – a summary of common approaches

Active learning – Vanderbilt University Centre for Teaching

Be thoughtful about forming groups

If the goal is to improve learning about content, it can be preferable to allow students to self-organise groups. Students will likely choose people they think they will be comfortable with which would reduce anxiety.

If the goal of group work is to produce a final product it may be preferable to mix groups up to encourage sharing different perspectives.

Error framing

Reframing mistakes or misconceptions as normal or useful reduces student anxiety. It also builds the relationship between the instructor and students because they feel that the instructor understands their thought process, making them more likely to continue contributing in the future.

Being transparent

Let students know why you are making certain teaching decisions. This increases student buy-in because they understand that you are making decisions to help them succeed.  Letting them know that you encourage students to work in groups because listening to different perspectives can help with learning can help students contribute their own views in group discussions. 

Students can assume that being called on is a punishment or embarrassment for not paying attention. If calling on students is being used to check understanding or enhance learning then it can be important to be clear about this. Otherwise students may be afraid to be called upon because they are afraid of what this means about the instructor’s opinion of them or what the rest of the class might think. 

More advice on supporting LGBTQ+ students

Universal design for learning

Ep 62 – LGBTQ+ tours in Zoology Museums

Natural history museums are a fantastic way to learn about nature, they allow you to look at the natural world in ways which are not always easy or otherwise possible. Specimens might be collected from parts of the world few people will ever get to visit, like the deep oceans. Natural history museums also preserve a record of nature and animals which can stretch back hundreds of years, offering insights into long-term trends which might otherwise be invisible. Museums are not just repositories, they also curate and display their collections, and in doing so they construct and convey narratives.

It is impossible to tell every story at once, so by necessity some will get left out, or in some cases, purposefully suppressed. And in the same way you might find some books don’t engage your interest or speak to your experience, some communities might not engage with museums because they don’t see themselves or their interests reflected in the museum’s interpretation.

Tours can be a relatively straightforward way for museums to bring out different narratives and engage with a wider range of people. Tours are inherently more flexible than a printed interpretation panel, and provide museums an opportunity to try out different narratives and see how visitors respond. In today’s episode I’ll be speaking with the Museum of Zoology in Cambridge about their Bridging binaries tours, which have been put together to bring out LGBTQ+ themes and narratives from their collection. 

Bridging Binaries: LGBTQ+ tours at the Cabridge Museum of Zoology

Curating nature

  • For any given animal, there are an infinite number of facts about that animal. There are biases in who chooses which facts to say. Some information may even be purposefully or subconsciously hidden.
  • Museums choose which animals to display, they do not display everything equally. 80% of living things are arthropods, but that is not usually what we see in museums.
  • Had been a trend in museums to display fewer specimens, in favour instead of using models.
  • Other ‘fashion trends’ in museums have included taxidermy, dioramas, and painted murals.

Bridging Binaries programme objectives

  • Recognizing the ways in which science can be bias because of cultural or social norms
  • Recognizing the scientific contributions of LGBTQ+ communities and perspectives
  • Counter suggestions that homosexual behaviour is “against nature”

What is the relevance of sexual identity?

  • Human social prejudices creep into the way we talk about animals.
  • Scientists have changed their reported or published data to line up with cultural or social values, for example by removing references to same-sex sexual behaviour.
  • The tours are not focused on a piece of research which happens to have been written by an LGBTQ+ person. The tours highlight instances where the perspective provided by that identity contributed to discovery and learning.

Advice for institutions thinking of getting started

  • Work with the community to help choose and frame stories.
  • Check with the community that stories are being told in a constructive manner.
  • Just get one with it, because it’s the right thing to do.

Advice on engaging marginalized communities – IMCA.org (International City/County Management Association)

Missteps or rough spots

  • Navigating use of reproductive terminology or describing sexual behaviours when families and children are around. Pick your moment or get people to gather in so you don’t have to be too loud in the gallery. Families are welcome on the tour, but an introduction to the language which will be used on the tour allows participants to know what to expect. Visitors not on the tours have not had this discussion and their expectations should be respected.
  • Unpicking binaries when constrained by binary language is difficult.
  • Use of ‘gay’, ‘straight’, or ‘homosexual’ to describe animal behaviour, risks conflation with human behaviour.
  • Explanation what will be meant with the use of terms like ‘queer’, which have been/are used as slurs. Grounds the language to help participants feel comfortable.

“Animals don’t do sexual identity, they just do sex.”

Eric Anderson, sociologist.

Rough idea of what kids might be discussing in relationship and sex education in school – BigTalkEducation.co.uk

Inclusive language guide – Vic.gov.au

Next steps for the programme

  • Give tours content a permanent presence within the museum.
  • Updated written interpretation, printed or digital trail through the museum

Animal narratives

Cetaceans

Intersex fin whale – ResearchGate

Make a whale bookmark – University of Cambridge Museum of Zoology

Hermaphrodism in a dolphin – Institute of Cetacean Research, Japan

Giraffes

Over 90% of sexual behaviour in giraffes is between same-sex individuals. This stat emerges from these sources:

  • Pratt DM and VH Anderson. 1982. Population, distribution and behavior of giraffe in the Arusha National Park, Tanzania. Journal of Natural History 16 pp481-489
  • Pratt DM and VH Anderson. 1985. Giraffe social behavior. Journal of Natural History 19 pp771-781. I do not see an article by Pratt and anderson in 1979.
  • Dagg, AI and Foester JB. 1976. The giraffe, its biology, behavior and ecology. New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold.

Anne Innis Dagg – Ann Innis Dagg Foundation

Penguins

Male penguin paris foster chicks – NPR

Why are penguin’s sex lives so scandelous? – Atlas Obscura

Dr. George Murray Levick (1876-1956): Unpublished notes on the sexual habits of the Adélie penguin – ResearchGate

More queer animal narratives

Oxford University Natural History Museum

Contributions of LGBTQ+ scientists

Joan Roughgarden – Transgender Map

Critiques biased language in natural history. Argues for alternatives to theories of sexual selection.

Ep 61- Queer identity, research, and cricket behaviour

Environmental education can suffer from the same problem as a lot of STEM subjects, which is a mistaken understanding of what objectivity means in practice. The impulse of sticking to facts, figures, measurements often in practice means not talking about the person asking the questions and conducting the measurements. But of course these are human choices, affected by the identities of the humans who make them. In practice, objectivity should mean recognizing a person’s perspective, and taking steps to mitigate or balance any impacts this might have. Like wearing glasses to support vision. And most relevant to this series of episodes, focusing only on facts and figures also has the effect of erasing non-visible minorities from the picture.

Same-sex sexual behaviour (SSB)

Refers to reproductive or courting behaviour aimed at individuals of the same sex. Usually this term is used when describing behaviour which deviates from what is ‘expected’. For example earthworms are simultaneous hermaphrodites, individuals can produce sperm and eggs. Any reproductive behviour could be classed as same-sex sexual behaviour, but it is not usually classed as such because it is the expected behaviour.

This behaviour is also referred to as ‘homosexual behaviour’ in research, but there is a growing preference for SSB because it avoids the connotations ‘homosexual’ has from its use in human cultrual contexts. ‘Homosexual’ when referring to humans can refer to sexual behaviours, but also identities and romantic attractions.

Theories about the evolution of reproductive behaviours

Overview of Sexual Behavior Theories – Lake Forest College

Should Scientists Change How They View (and Study) Same Sex Behavior in Animals? – Yale

Science diversified: Queer perspectives on research

How queer perspectives are driving research. – Nature (podcast episode)

Cricket Reproduction

In the video below, the females have a long thin projection at the end of their abdomen between the cerci, this is the egg laying ovipositor. You can see the males doing their courtship posturing.

Other topics mentioned

Parthenogenesis in whip tailed lizards

How an Asexual Lizard Procreates Alone – National Geographic

Aphid reproduction

Asexual reproduction in insects – theTech.org

Image source

Evolution and the laryngeal nerve in mammals