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39 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 89 (2015)
From Jack to Jill: Gender Expression as Protected Speech in the Modern Schoolhouse

handle is hein.journals/nyuls39 and id is 95 raw text is: 




      FROM JACK TO JILL: GENDER EXPRESSION AS
 PROTECTED SPEECH IN THE MODERN SCHOOLHOUSE

                          DANIELLE  WEATHERBYm

                                ABSTRACT

     In recent years, transgender  adults in the entertainment world  have
capitalized on their public platform to advocate for and increase awareness
about  issues affecting the transgender community. Yet even with the emerging
cultural understanding of this community, there is a noticeable absence of a
voice  for transgender  youth, a  particularly vulnerable segment  of  this
misunderstood population. Children-often as young as four or five-are more
commonly  proclaiming  to be born in the wrong body.  In addition to being
subject to intolerable bullying and harassment by their peers, transgender youth
face an  uphill battle in public schools because educators are unprepared to
handle  the logistics of their transition process, which includes a prolonged
period of living in all aspects as the opposite sex.
    First, this article acknowledges the quagmire plaguing public schools that
serve  a transgender population. When   and to what  extent should schools
intervene when children in their care are confronted with gender identity issues?
What  responsibilities do schools have to protect and educate both those children
facing gender  identity issues and those children who are impacted by their
peers' non-conforming gender expression? Finally, and most significantly, how
should  schools address  the daily logistics affecting transgender students,
including bathroom and  locker room designation, which have historically been
determined by a student's biological sex?
    Second, this article analyzes the current legal landscape governing issues
affecting transgender youth  in public K-12  schools. Although  there is a
burgeoning recognition in the law of rights for sexual choices and identities that
are non-traditional, the current law is insufficient in dealing with the practical
and logistical concerns that schools serving transgender students face on a daily
basis.
    Next, the article advances a novel argument  that demands  more robust
protections for a transgender student's gender expression. It submits that a
transgender  student's expressive conduct (including her desire to use the
restroom that corresponds with her gender identity) is speech that falls within
the protective umbrella of the First Amendment. Since a transgender student's
outward expression of gender conveys an important message to others about that
student's identity, and because fitting in and being accepted are so vital to a
transgender  youth's  psychological  well-being, a   transgender  student's



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Imaged with Permission of N.Y.U. Review of Law & Social Change

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