Qatar Tribune

Is Science In The Need Of A Language Update?

Is it educating and guiding our students with knowledge and skills to prepare them for careers or is it furthering cultural ideals?

- LYNN SCHMIDT

OUR institutio­ns of higher education are not exactly stepping up during this moment of generation­al change. At a minimum these institutio­ns are not keeping up and, at worst, they are failing us altogether.

Recently, my daughter, who is on the cusp of leaving our nest, and I attended an admission event for prospectiv­e students at a state university, specializi­ng in biological sciences. After a tour of campus, I stepped into the women’s restroom in the student center. On the sink in the restroom was a box of free menstrual products. The sign on the box read “You may have found this box in a men’s restroom. This is because there are individual­s who use this restroom who need these products.”

My issue with the above scenario is not about the transgende­r individual­s who use the restroom. Of course everyone has the right to use a public restroom. Let me be clear, people who identify as transgende­r deserve our respect and kindness, like any other individual. They are people with rights, and I am not suggesting that any be taken away from them.

As someone who earned a bachelor’s degree in science and who studied biology in order to matriculat­e, I will tell you from a biological perspectiv­e, if a person needs a menstrual product, that person is not geneticall­y male. Admittedly it has been a while, but I learned that the and Y chromosome­s, also known as the sex chromosome­s, determine the biological sex of an individual. Females are born with and males are born with Y chromosome­s. And as far as I know, this has not changed regardless of how our language has evolved.

This whole experience left me in a quandary. Is academia being forced to ignore biology to satisfy the culture of their students How is the world of science and academia addressing gender identity Has the study of biology developed to address the biological roots of gender identity These questions were swimming in my mind all the while as I was trying to accept and honor that my child’s generation has different ideas and values than I do when it comes to gender.

But it’s not just about bathrooms or menstrual products. It is also the need to tiptoe around pronouns and the word-policing, feeling like any one of us may be canceled at any time because of an honest slip-up.

The American public also holds a complex set of views around the issues of gender identity. Pew Research Center completed a survey last May of more than 10,000 adults. Among respondent­s, 0 said a person’s gender is determined at birth, which is up from 5 in 2021 and 54 in 2017. Roughly 8 out of 10 U.S. adults say there is at least some discrimina­tion against transgende­r people in our society, and a majority favors laws that would protect transgende­r individual­s from discrimina­tion in jobs, housing and public spaces.

Then there is the issue of cancel culture. A New York Times Siena poll showed that 84 of Americans say being afraid to exercise freedom of speech is a serious problem. Over half, 55 , of Americans say that “they have held their tongue, that is, not spoken freely over the last year because they were concerned about retaliatio­n or harsh criticism,” The Times reported.

In his book “A Time to Build,” Yuval Levin defines an institutio­n as the frameworks and structures of what we do together. Institutio­ns provide a structure, are moved by purpose, defined by an ideal, and are capable of certain functions. Levin writes: “What does stand out about our time, though, is not the strength of the pressures we are under but the weakness of our institutio­ns from the family on up through the national government, with much in between. That weakness leaves us less able to hold together against the pressures we do face.”

Now more than ever, as Americans grapple with these pressures, whether it is the changing attitudes on gender issues or dealing with the inability to speak freely, we need strong institutio­ns to help guide and lead us. Unfortunat­ely, across the board, Americans’ confidence in our institutio­ns is at a new low, and institutio­ns don’t appear to be adding clarity where people need it.

I hope that administra­tors in higher education begin to recognize the importance of their roles as an institutio­n in our society and start to act accordingl­y, thinking about what their purpose, ideals and functions are. Is it educating and guiding our students with knowledge and skills to prepare them for careers or is it furthering cultural ideals

My daughter will soon walk past pillars on her way into campus academic buildings. May they be as strong institutio­nally as they are architectu­rally. And may they teach her biology.

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