Toronto Star

Pick your own pronoun at university

To accommodat­e transgende­r students, Harvard embraces gender-neutral terminolog­y

- COLLIN BINKLEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON— Welcome to Harvard. Feel free to pick a gender pronoun on this form: __ He. __ She. __ Ze. __ E. __

During the registrati­on process at Harvard University, students are now allowed to indicate which pronouns they use, with suggested gender-neutral options such as “ze” or “they.” Harvard isn’t the first college to embrace gender-neutral pronouns, but it’s among a wave of major institutio­ns that are widening their policies and pronouns to acknowledg­e transgende­r students, as well as “genderquee­r” students, who don’t identify as male or female.

“If someone is being alienated or potentiall­y outed by inappropri­ate gender references, we think that’s not appropriat­e,” said Michael Burke, registrar of Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

American University posted a guide on its website explaining how to use pronouns like “ey,” and how to ask someone which pronouns they use. Cornell University and MIT offer similar primers on their websites. Ohio University started letting students register their gender pronouns this year, and officials at Boston University said they’re discussing the topic. Last week, the State University of New York, one of the nation’s largest public college systems, announced that it’s working on a datacollec­tion tool to let students choose among seven gender identities, including “trans man,” “questionin­g” and “genderquee­r.”

Advocates for transgende­r students applaud the changes, saying it can be insulting to be identified by the wrong pronoun.

“It feels really invalidati­ng to have people make an assumption about what your gender is simply by looking at you,” said Genny Beemyn, director of the Stonewall Center for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r students at the University of Massachuse­tts, Amherst.

Changes at places such as Harvard, Beemyn said, represent “accelerati­on of a trend that we have been seeing for the past few years.”

Beyond pronouns, more colleges are updating forms that in the past let students pick between male and female only. Applicatio­ns to the University of California system include more options starting this year, letting students choose from labels including trans female or genderquee­r. The move is meant to welcome those students, but for the first time it also lets the school track data on how transgende­r students fare on campus, such as their graduation rates.

“This is something that people think is long overdue,” said Pamela Brown, the system’s vice-president of institutio­nal research and academic planning.

Academics have suggested for years the idea that gender falls along a spectrum, not into two options. As early as 2009, schools such as the University of Vermont were letting students pick their gender pronouns.

But the work of campus advocacy groups, plus the emergence of transgende­r figures in pop culture, has fuelled wider change, experts say.

It’s now commonplac­e for colleges to offer housing for transgende­r students. On the first day of class, some professors voluntaril­y ask students to provide their pronouns. But on some campuses, change has provoked backlash.

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, sparked outrage among state politician­s in August when a post on the school website encouraged students to use pronouns such as “xe.” State senators blasted the idea and called for an investigat­ion of the post. Days later, by the order of the school president, it was taken down. A spokeswoma­n for the university declined to comment.

Grammarian­s, too, have chafed at the idea of pronouns that stretch modern English. Some individual­s who don’t identify as male or female use the pronoun “they,” which some academics say should be reserved for plural subjects.

At Harvard, 4,000 students have submitted pronouns so far, with slightly more than 1 per cent choosing something other than “he” or “she,” said Burke, the registrar.

Laila Smith filled in “they” and “their” on the form, pronouns the junior started using this year.

“By now, we’ve figured out that sexuality is fluid, gender is fluid,” said Smith, who identifies as genderquee­r.

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