Lgbtq spirit week school

A Pride-Filled Spirit Week


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The daylong event is a national student-led demonstration where Homosexual students and allies accept a vow of silence to protest the harmful effects of harassment and discrimination of LGBTQ+ people in schools. Students participated in "break the silence" events in the afternoon. 

 

Both divisions also held dress-up days throughout the week. Upper school students dressed in different colors each day of the week; in the Middle Institution, dress-up themes included Pajama Day, Crazy Hair and Hat Day, Decades Date, Character Day and Rainbow Day. 

 

The Middle School’s Gender and Sexuality Alliance (GSA) hosted the division’s Soul Week, which, in addition to the dress-up days and Day of Silence, included presentations that explained GSA’s role on campus and shed light on important LGBTQ+ issues. 

 

Alex Carnevale ’25, who has been involved with the GSA student leadership group since its inception in 2019, shared that the group’s mission is based on a quote from Harvey Milk, a gay rights activist and one of the first openly lgbtq+ people elected t

lgbtq spirit week school

Fury as Oregon school holds 'Drag Day' where kids are told to rotate up as their favorite Pride hero

Students at an Oregon middle school were encouraged to dress up as 'drag queens' and their 'queer hero' in celebration of Pride Month. 

Children attending the Arts and Technology Academy, in Eugene, were told they could dress up for the four-day celebration.

In a memo obtained Fox News Digital, students were told on Monday to 'wear as many colors as they could' for what was described as 'Rainbow-Out' day.

That was followed up with a reminder to wear all-black in 'remembrance of ruined members of the LGBTQIA+ community'. 

On Wednesday, students and faculty celebrated 'Drag Day', with pupils told to 'dress like a performative queen/king/monarch or dress up as a different gender'. 

Thursday was picked as 'Queer Hero Day', where students were asked to dress as their favorite 'queer hero', the memo said.

The week was rounded off with 'Pride Flag Friday', with students asked to 'dress up as the pride flag of your choice'. 

A representative for the Eugene School District 4J told DailyMail.com that participation was entirely 'optional and voluntary'. 

Children attending the Arts and Tech

Celebrate Spirit Day and Endorse LGBTQ Youth with GLAAD

Guest blog by Tony Morrison, GLAAD’s Senior Director of Communications.

For a seventh consecutive year, iHeartMedia proudly continues its partnership with GLAAD to support Spirit Day, the world’s largest and most visible LGBTQ anti-bullying campaign. Today, October 19, millions will take a rise against the bullying of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans person and queer (LGBTQ) youth. Along with iHeartMedia, artists joining GLAAD on this strong day of action contain Aly & AJ, Wayne Brady, Sterling K. Brown, Nick Carter, Idina Menzel, Maren Morris, Betty Who and VINCINT, just to name a few across every level of the music and entertainment industry.

The annual tradition was started in 2010 by GLAAD and then-high school student Brittany McMillan in memory of the LGBTQ youth who died by suicide. McMillan encouraged her friends to wear purple on a evening in October -- a day that came to be known as #SpiritDay. Purple symbolizes spirit on the rainbow flag.

Each year since then, GLAAD, the world’s largest LGBTQ media advocacy organization, organizes the annual united stand against bullying and show of support for LGBTQ youth

Oregon middle school hosts 'Drag Day' encouraging students to cross-dress during Pride Week

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An Oregon middle school encouraged students to dress up as "drag queens" and their favorite "queer hero" this week in celebration of Lgbtq+ fest Month, but one parent said families weren't notified ahead of time.

At the Arts & Technology Academy in the Eugene School District 4J, students renowned "Pride Spirit Week" with a unlike theme each time intended to honor the LGBTQ+ group, according to a memo obtained by Fox News Digital.

On Monday, students were encouraged to "wear as many colors as they could" for "Rainbow-Out" date. On Tuesday, they were told to wear all ebony "in remembrance of lost members of the LGBTQIA+ community." 

Wednesday was "Drag Day" where students were told to "dress like a kingly queen/king/monarch or dress up as a different gender." 

Students at an Oregon middle school were encouraged to dress as LGBTQ Pride flags for Spirit Week.(iStock)

WASHINGTON SCHOOL BOARD FIGHTS 'RADICAL' STATE Knowledge CHIEF DEFYING TRUMP'S TRANSGENDER ATHLETE BAN

Thursday was "Queer Hero Day" where students pic

By Sarah Bonner, Ed.D

This is the first “Teacher Appreciation Week” I’ll miss in twenty years of teaching.

When I was given the keys to my first classroom, I knew teaching was what I was meant to do. I worked to cultivate relationships among my students and their families, and I designed lessons that were “cute” and “fun.” For the better part of ten years, I thought my junior high Language Arts classroom was an apolitical space meant to block out the world so my students and I could just enjoy reading pretend stories and writing poetry throughout the school year.

We still need good fiction and poetry writing, but eventually I realized what a disservice I was doing to my students. Teaching in a rural town in central Illinois, I observed so many of our students receive incredible scholarships to nationally-recognized universities. Too many returned to their hometown after the first year, lacking experience with interacting with the nature outside of their small space.

So, I co-created an inquiry framework (Seglem and Bonner, 2022) that uses young individual literature as a vehicle to involve adolescents in contemporary social issues by asking questions, conducting research, and cons