Gay Friendly Public Schools: Will New Program Ideas Decrease Violence and Tension?
According to National Public Radio鈥檚 (NPR) review of the new public school initiative to create gay-friendly public schools, the city of Chicago is instilling plans for 鈥渁 new school where gay students and others wouldn't face the bullying and harassment they endure in other schools.鈥
As Chicago has surfaced as the focal point of this controversy, acting as one of the first cities in the country to widely support this public program shift, school and community leaders are caught in the middle of a national and heated debate.
The Background: Why Create Gay-Friendly Schools?
While Chicago is currently earning the most attention for its plan to create a gay-friendly school, cities across the country have implemented these programs in the past. Specifically, New York made the gay-friendly Harvey Milk School, while Milwaukee created the Alliance High School; both of these programs have been reported as inspirations for the up-and-coming Chicago school, which is intended to open in 2010.
As the CNN report, 鈥淐hicago May Get Gay-Friendly High School,鈥 reveals, school and community officials in Chicago created the proposal for a gay-friendly high school so that students of all sexual preferences and identities could attend school without feeling harassed or in danger. William Greaves, Chicago鈥檚 liaison to the gay and lesbian community, is one of the advocates for the new school and is also a contributor to the school鈥檚 proposed design. According to
