Book Chapters
Genderism and trans students in Hong Kong higher education
- Genderism and trans students in Hong Kong higher education
- Marginalised communities in higher education: Disadvantage, mobility and indigeneity
- New York
- Routledge
- 2021
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- Students attending universities or colleges come from diverse groups, including racial, ethnic, ability status, sexual orientation, gender and intersex identities. Institutions of higher education may encounter challenges in acknowledging the needs of diverse groups of students. Particularly, these institutions could possibility have difficulties in understanding transgender students’ needs. In the education literature, transgender students often face intolerant/negative attitudes, prejudice and discrimination against them in society (Beemyn, 2016; Wernick et al., 2014). Transgender or, to use a more inclusive term, ‘trans’ students in this chapter are defined as those students who ‘do not identify with or normatively enact the gender assigned to them at birth’ (Wernick et al., 2014, p. 927). Scholars in the field of trans prejudice often adopt the concept of genderism to conceptualize prejudice, discriminatory and intolerant attitudes against trans people. For instance, Hill and Willoughby (2005) perceived genderism as ‘an ideology that reinforces the negative evaluation of gender non-conformity or an incongruence between sex and gender’ (p. 534). Copyright © 2021 selection and editorial matter, Neil Harrison and Graeme Atherton; individual chapters, the contributors.
-
- English
- Book Chapters
-
- 9780367264550
- 9780367264574
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/2ac9376c
- 2021-09-08
Recent Book Chapters
Life and values education in Hong KongBook Chapters
An account of environmental education in Hong Kong: The role of non-formal and informal educationBook Chapters
The use of epistemic network analysis in analysing classroom discourse in EMI-science classroomsBook Chapters
Architecture of health: Hygiene and schooling in Hong Kong, 1901–1941Book Chapters
Differences in the relationships between executive functions, reading engagement, and reading comprehension between primary students from Grade 3 and Grade 5Book Chapters
Life and moral education and Chinese language education: Trends and prospects in the Greater China RegionBook Chapters
Transprofessional identity of L1 Chinese language teachers in changing multilingual contextsBook Chapters
A review of the development of language teaching and learning in Hong Kong in the past 50 yearsBook Chapters