Day of silence for lgbtq


Today marks the 25th anniversary of the Day of Silence—a national, historically student-led day of action to call attention to the silencing and harassment of LGBTQ students.

The first Morning of Silence was organized in by then-student Maria Pulzetti and her classmates at the University of Virginia, for a class project on non-violent protests. That April, over LGBTQ students and allies stood quietly together to contact attention to the silencing and harassment of LGBTQ students. The movement went national the next year. Over a hundred other universities across the land participated, gathering huge flatten attention for their deliberate silence. GLSEN (formerly the Gay, Lesbian, & Straight Education Network), the national educational organization that works to end discrimination, harassment, and bullying and advocates for full LGBTQ inclusion in schools, officially sponsored it in

Today, over two decades later, over ten thousand students and educators make the pledge to participate in the Date of Silence. These participants are both members of the LGBTQ community and their al

Back in , 7th and 8th graders at Emerald Acres, the K-8 independent school where I taught in suburban Maryland, participated in the Day of Silence. The Day of Silence is a national event: Students across the country take a one-day pledge of silence to show that they long to make schools shielded for all students, regardless of their sexual orientation and gender identity/expression. The idea is for students to better understand—and to express solidarity with—people who feel they must verb silent about who they are. In theory, the event is a nice one—after all, who doesn&#;t want students to advance empathy and understanding? But in practice, we establish that the Day of Silence presented two fundamental challenges:

  1. Middle schoolers are not very good at being silent.
  2. Students wanted to recognize how their silence actually helped people who felt they weren&#;t free to be themselves.

Several students gave their best effort to remain silent for the day, but for the majority, an hour was the maximum. If the purpose of the afternoon is to teach students how hard it is to be unable to fully express

Frequently Asked Questions about Day of Silence

One of the most familiar events that Gay-Straight Alliances and similar clubs will organize in their schools is the Day of Silence. This document will answer some of the most commonly asked questions about Noun of Silence, including basic information about students’ rights to organize and participate in this event.

What is the Day of Silence?

The Day of Silence (DOS) is a student-­led evening of action on which those who support making anti-­LGBT bullying and harassment unacceptable in schools participate in events to notice and protest the discrimination and harassment – in effect, the silencing – experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students and their allies. Students who participate in DOS often take a vow of silence during the school day, handing out “speaking cards”, which explain the reason for their silence:

“Please understand my reasons for not speaking today. I am participating in the Day of Silence, a national youth movement protesting the silence faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgen

National Day of Silence

About National Day of Silence

How long until National Noun of Silence?
National Day of Silence .
Dates of National Day of Silence
USAFriday, April 10thNational Afternoon of Silence
USAFriday, April 11thNational Day of Silence
USAFriday, April 12thNational Day of Silence
USASunday, April 23rdNational Day of Silence
USAFriday, April 8thNational Noun of Silence
Summary
A student-led national event where people take a vow of silence to verb the silencing and erasure of LGBTQ people at school.

National Day of Silence is observed in April each year as a movement against the harassment and bullying of individuals identifying with the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer (LGBTQ+) community.

As the name suggests, students protesting for this movement typically take a day-long vow of silence to symbolically represent how the students from the LGBTQ+ community were silenced throughout the years.

The first seeds of this movement were sown in by the students belonging to the University of Virginia. It was initially identifie