Interlochen center for the arts gay
LGBT Community In Boarding School
WillemS1
<p>Hey guys,
As many of you may know I am a happy freshman at NMH this year, and am excited to notice what my BS experience gives me these next several years. What you may not recognize about me is that I am also an openly gay student. I’ve found that NMH is a very accepting school, and while the queer community here is not crazy enormous it’s very nice for a academy of this size. NMH is a very liberal/artsy type of school, so I was not extremely surprised by how great the environment here is about these issues (even our Dean of Students is a lesbian!), but I am really interested in how other schools cure and recognize the LGBT community. I’d love to overhear everyone’s thoughts on the subject!
Thanks
Willem</p>
ChoatieMom2
<p>This has been posted before, but I consider it speaks adequately of Choate:</p>
<p>[Find</a> a Different Word](<a href=“Find a Different Pos - YouTube”>Find a Different Word - YouTube)</p>
WillemS3
<p>I’ve actually seen that before! Theres this cool facebook group called “I was/am gay in an elite prep school”, and people post some wonderful stuff! I hav
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Pride art creates LGBTQ+ visibility in rural northern Michigan
Pride month creates visibility and group for people on a spectrum of sexuality.
And now, art exhibits are exhibiting up in rural communities in Northern Michigan to carry people together.
This exposure is audio reactive. Take a minute to let it out.
Those are some of the first words that materialize when you come in the art exhibit at the Farm Club.
It’s a storage container. It’s gloomy inside with a projector that lights up white sms on a dark background with phrases you are encouraged to say out loud.
“I am proud.”
A rainbow of paint echoes out from the words in front of you. The louder you are, the more color you can see.
“I can act this!”
A local movie company set up the projector and effects inside, while Heather Spooner painted the outside with geometric shapes and colors from the Diversity Pride flag.
This is one of three interactive storage container art exhibits that Up North Pride is putting on with this year's theme of “Catharsis”.
In the middle of the mural, there is the white outline of a cicada.
“As a cicada can shed its shell,” says Spooner, “My hope for this exhibit i
Local Schools Ahead Of Gender diverse Curve
As school districts across the country plan to begin another college year, many are struggling with how to accommodate transgender students in the wake of conflicting federal guidelines and circuit court rulings. While the issue appears bound for the U.S. Supreme Court, many northern Michigan schools aren’t waiting to begin examining their own policies.
T.J. Mackey, vice president for student affairs and executive dean at Interlochen Center for the Arts, says the school has undergone “an evolution” in protocol affecting transgender students over the last decade. “It started ten years ago with a student who was a camper,” says Mackey. “We received a phone call or email (from the family) asking us what we would do. Our first response was, ‘That’s a wonderful question.’ Once we were asked the question, we needed to get to work as an institution.”
Mackey says Interlochen’s administration focused on two key fronts when considering how best to accommodate LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) students and campers on campus.
“First, there are the pragmatic