Image 01 Image 03

Course at CU Boulder Teaches ‘Queering Literacy’ Methods for High School Teachers

Course at CU Boulder Teaches ‘Queering Literacy’ Methods for High School Teachers

“Theories and practices of literacy teaching and learning that challenge multiple forms of oppression.”

Whatever you do, don’t suggest that progressives in education have an agenda. That would be hateful.

The College Fix reports:

CU Boulder class teaches ‘queering literacy’ methods for high school teachers

Aspiring high school English and social studies teachers can learn “queering literacy” methods at the University of Colorado at Boulder this upcoming fall semester.

“Queering Literacy in Secondary Classrooms” teaches students using “theories and practices of literacy teaching and learning that challenge multiple forms of oppression,” according to the course description.

“Using the tools of queer pedagogy,” this course will prepare education majors to “develop, and enact strategies for planning and implementing literacy instruction that moves beyond inclusion of differences in the English/language arts and social studies curriculum,” the course description states.

A professor who regularly teaches the course provided further insights on the content in a phone interview with The College Fix.

Professor Sara Staley described education as facing a “highly polarized political moment right now, especially around topics like DEI.” The current listed professor for the fall 2025 semester is Ashley Cartun.

Staley said she wants to support “teachers and students” who are “trying to create spaces of belonging in every classroom.” She said Colorado “laws and policies” require teachers to “create a safe, respectful, inclusive learning environment for a diverse population of students.”

She said, “a lot of research” shows teachers are not trained enough in “gender and sexual diversity.” Staley also co-runs the Queer Endeavor, a CU-Boulder program that works in “close collaboration with district and school leaders, K-12 teachers, and counselors” for LGBTQ education.

There is also “a lot of research that shows that school can be a pretty unwelcoming place for students who are different” especially for “queer and trans youths,” Staley said.

The class she teaches helps students learn about “diverse identities” and “what it looks like to read a book with a queer character in it” without reinforcing “negative stereotypes.”

Staley said, “queer pedagogy” is about “supporting students to think critically by asking questions of what they read.”

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

It should have no place in any classroom.

henrybowman | June 24, 2025 at 2:52 pm

“Using the tools of queer pedagogy”
Talk about Strange Brew.

“There is also “a lot of research that shows that school can be a pretty unwelcoming place for students who are different” especially for “queer and trans youths,” Staley said.”
No. Today, school is an unwelcoming place for NORMAL youngsters.

George_Kaplan | June 24, 2025 at 10:51 pm

Teachers are not supposed to be taught how to abuse or molest children, but apparently that’s now archaic thinking?

Is Ward Churchill involved?