Abstract

Objective:to analyze teachers’ conceptions about transgenderity in childhood and to identify the possibilities and limits of working with these children in the school context.Method:a qualitative research study, carried out with 23 teachers from two municipal elementary schools. Semi-structured interviews were used to produce empirical material. As an analytical resource, the content analysis technique, thematic modality, was used.Results:six thematic categories emerged in the set of empirical material: There is transgenderity in childhood; The construction of gender identity and roles in childhood; The experience of trans children in the school context; Trans children: How to deal with?; Discussing the differences in the classroom: Is this the way?; and Dilemmas of school and family interaction. It was found that the gender dichotomy is reinforced in the classroom, causing tensions and stereotyped divisions for male and female roles. Various forms of violence have been reproduced by classmates and teachers, who, due to lack of knowledge or to unpreparedness, reinforce concepts and attitudes that lead to the maintenance of exclusion.Conclusion:the schools find it difficult to promote the inclusion of trans children. It is necessary to create strategies aimed at raising awareness and training the professionals who make up the school environment, especially teachers in the initial grades.

Highlights

  • In the beginning of life, children understand the discourses about what it is to be a boy or a girl and what is allowed to each one

  • This process favors/ reinforces the matrix of binarism, developing gender roles in subjects from an early age according to situational conditions, with their biological bodies and pleasures[3]

  • Recent studies aimed at investigating the association between genotype and trans-sexuality have indicated that several genes associated with sex hormones can contribute to gender dysphoria[24,25]

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Summary

Introduction

In the beginning of life, children understand the discourses about what it is to be a boy or a girl and what is allowed to each one. From an early age, framing a particular gender is permeated by social and family influences, outlining behaviors, tastes and feelings based on a heteronormative conception[1,2]. This process favors/ reinforces the matrix of binarism, developing gender roles in subjects from an early age according to situational conditions, with their biological bodies and pleasures[3]. In today’s society, gender, as a concept, provides for male/female binarism and refers to ways of identifying oneself and being identified as male or female, and this, as far as it is concerned, is transversal to cultural, ethnic, racial, political and economic aspects. The truth is that the choice to which pole the individual should belong is something socially pre-established even before the child comes into the world[4,5]

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