Looking ahead: To kindergarten and beyond.
Apply Your Knowledge
Looking ahead: To kindergarten and beyond.
What’s ahead for LGBTQ+ children?
As early childhood educators, we often think about kindergarten readiness as a set of competencies that children should possess by the time that they leave preschool and enter the elementary grades. But we can also play a role in ensuring that elementary schools are prepared to fully support and celebrate children with diverse experiences, development, identities, and family structures. In other words, how can we better support children and family members who may be already be feeling marginalized as they approach this critical transition point?
A first step may be to collaborate with elementary school systems and colleagues to share resources. While it is never okay to share sensitive information about a particular family or child, we can collaborate across systems with the goal of helping LGBTQ+ children feel welcomed and supported, regardless of whether they have expressed or declared their identities yet.
We can also help our elementary school colleagues proactively address the very real concerns that Rainbow families may with regard to bullying and other documented forms of harm.
Continue to build your knowledge and share resources with Rainbow families and elementary school allies.
Fortunately, resources are much more readily available to support LGBTQ+ children and families in elementary school and beyond. However, as children’s identities come into clearer focus in elementary school, so do the actions of those who seek to exclude, erase or harm them. LGBTQ+ students are bullied at high rates and are often exposed to shockingly frequent slurs and harassment. Their mental health can suffer as a result.
So how can early childhood educators be a positive influence? Continue to build and share your knowledge! The more you know, the better you will be able to serve families as they transition into the K–12 system. Explore the following topics and share your resources with families and elementary school colleagues.
Care and supports for LGBTQ+ children
How can elementary school teachers ensure a safe, supportive and inclusive school environment for LGBTQ+ students?
- Explore the resources on this PBS Learning Media webpage for educators: Understanding LGBTQ+ Identity: A Toolkit for Educators.
- Visit the Trevor Project’s website to learn about Creating Safer Spaces in Schools for LGBTQ+ Youth.
- Check out the Resources for LGBTQI+ Students on the U.S. Department of Education website.
- Explore the LGBT Youth Resources on the American Psychological Association website.
Care and supports for trans and gender-nonconforming (GNC) children
Trans and gender-nonconforming children need support from understanding and knowledgeable teachers. Here’s what you can do to help:
- Visit the Human Rights Campaign website to Get the Facts on Gender-Affirming Care.
- Explore the GLSEN webpage, Supporting Trans and GNC Students, to learn about gender diversity, pronoun visibility, trans student rights, how to create an inclusive curriculum, and GSA (Gender and Sexuality Alliance) practices. Then share this information with your elementary school colleagues to help establish or build on existing supports.
- Visit this Human Rights Campaign webpage to learn more about Affirming Gender in Elementary School.
Building an Inclusive Curriculum
Elementary schools are often viewed as places where the foundations of inclusivity are built and where children develop an understanding of diversity, identities and allyship. This is an erroneous assumption. The foundations of inclusivity are built in early childhood, and elementary school should be a place where this work is continued rather than started. Share information about the inclusive practices that you have incorporated into your early childhood curriculum so that your elementary school colleagues can continue this important work.
- Visit this GLSEN webpage to learn more about LGBTQ Visbility and Integration in Elementary Schools.
- Check out these Lesson Plans to Create LGBTQ+ Inclusive Classrooms and Schools on the Human Rights Campaign website.
GSAs and Rainbow Clubs
GSAs (Gender and Secuality Alliances) have been adopted by elementary schools, where such organizations are often referred to as Rainbow Clubs. These student-led clubs provide a safe and inclusive space for LGBTQ+ elementary schoolers. Some groups are informal (especially for younger students) while others offer activities, provide peer support, host social events, and even lead efforts to address school issues.
Rainbow clubs can:
- Help LGBTQ+ students feel safer and more accepted
- Educate other students about LGBTQ+ issues
- Teach young people how to be strong allies for LGBTQ+ peers
- Reduce bias, stereotyping, bullying, and harassment
- Provide access to an accepting adult—a factor that has been shown to reduce the risk of suicide attempts among LGBTQ+ youth by 40%
Share resources on GSAs and Rainbow Clubs with your elementary school colleagues and encourage them to build their knowledge and establish clubs at their schools.
These resources will help them get started:
- Creating and Sustaining GSAs in Elementary Schools on the Pride and Less Prejudice website
- Starting a GSA at Your School on the GLSEN website
- What is a Rainbow Club? on the Gender Inclusive Classrooms website
- Learn about GSA Days and GSA Networks on the Illinois Safe Schools Alliance website
Encourage elementary school teachers to access inclusive children’s literature
Just as they do for younger children, inclusive children's books help elementary schoolers see themselves and their families reflected in the stories they read. This can help them feel more confident and accepted, and it can also help them learn about different cultures and perspectives. The empathy and understanding that inclusive literature fosters is critical for all children as they continue their K–12 journeys.
The following resources will help them get started:
- Stonewall.org has a hand-selected list of LGBTQ+ inclusive books for students in grades K–12.
- Family Equality has compiled a list of Early Elementary LGBTQ Family-Friendly Books.
- Learning for Justice has an LGBTQ+ library of books and films for students of all ages and reading levels, as well as professional development options to broaden teachers’ understanding of LGBTQ+ history and lived experiences.
- The Pride and Less Prejudice website provides LGBTQ-inclusive books for elementary schoolers in grades K–3 to help students and teachers “Read out loud, read out proud!”
- We Need Diverse Books at diversebooks.org advocates for inclusive children’s literature and includes resources and links to a wide variety of book lists and sources.
As an early childhood educator, you can have a profound and lasting impact on your early learners as they transition to kindergarten. If you don’t seize this opportunity to promote inclusive practices in kindergarten, elementary school and beyond, who will? Make a difference by showing your elementary school colleagues that Early Pride matters!