Episodi

  • The future really is queer: How Queer Educator Representation Impacts Students | Ep. 190 (with Julia Lathin)
    Jan 22 2026


    In this episode, host Bryan Stanton (they/them) talks with Julia Lathin (she/her), a lesbian art teacher in Los Angeles, about the evolution of her teaching—from closeted survival in a Michigan Catholic school with a morality clause, to building affirming, creative classrooms for queer youth in California.


    Listeners will learn:

    • What it meant to teach under a “morality clause” while hiding key parts of her identity
    • How one small phrase—“pick a better word”—became a lifelong teaching mantra
    • Practical ways to create safe, affirming art classrooms
    • What happens when admin support is missing—and when you finally find it
    • Why queer joy and authenticity are both resistance and renewal


    If this conversation resonated with you, subscribe, share, and leave a review to help more educators find Teaching While Queer.


    Keywords: boundaries, visibility, faith conflict, policy climate, curriculum censorship, student support, admin conflict, community care, queer joy, burnout, arts classrooms, professional risk, K–12, high school, middle school, arts educator, public school, Catholic/private school, Queer Educators, arts educators, faith, values, and identity, healing, burnout, and sustainability, closeted, questioning at school.


    Teaching While Queer is a podcast for LGBTQ+ educators navigating teaching, leadership, and survival in today’s schools. The show explores queer and trans representation in education, educator burnout, book bans, workplace discrimination, tokenism, doxing, and advocacy—while sharing practical strategies for building inclusive classrooms, affirming school cultures, and safer learning environments. Episodes center gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, nonbinary, asexual, aromantic, agender, and Two-Spirit educators, with conversations on gender identity in schools, anti-bullying practices, mental health, and community care. This podcast supports educators who feel isolated and offers solidarity, tools, and hope for LGBTQ+ teachers working across K–12 and higher education.

    Teaching While Queer is a podcast for LGBTQ+ educators navigating teaching, leadership, and survival in today’s schools. The show explores queer and trans representation in education, educator burnout, book bans, workplace discrimination, tokenism, doxing, and advocacy—while sharing practical strategies for building inclusive classrooms, affirming school cultures, and safer learning environments. Episodes center gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, nonbinary, asexual, aromantic, agender, and Two-Spirit educators, with conversations on gender identity in schools, anti-bullying practices, mental health, and community care. This podcast supports educators who feel isolated and offers solidarity, tools, and hope for LGBTQ+ teachers working across K–12 and higher education.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    50 min
  • Teaching While Trans: “I Just Decided to Be Myself” | Ep. 189 (with Rosaline Keane Kelly)
    Jan 15 2026


    When physics and math teacher Rosaline Keane Kelly (she/her) began her teaching journey in Ireland, she didn’t yet know she was trans. Education became the mirror that helped her understand herself—and the space where she learned to lead with authenticity.


    In this episode, Rosaline shares what it was like to come out and transition while teaching in a religiously influenced school system, how she now builds inclusive science classrooms, and why belonging and laughter matter as much as lesson plans.


    Listeners will learn:

    • How teaching placement stress and self-discovery intertwined in Rosaline’s transition
    • Strategies for modeling inclusivity in science classrooms
    • Ways to handle misgendering and the “apology spiral”
    • How to build belonging and restorative practice with students
    • What trans joy and authenticity look like in daily teaching life


    If this conversation supports your work or your heart, subscribe, review, and share Teaching While Queer so others can find us too.


    Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.


    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    39 min
  • How One Gay Father Turned Pain Into a Purpose-Driven Nonprofit | Ep. 188 (with Tyson Pete)
    Jan 10 2026

    Tyson joins Teaching While Queer to share the deeply personal journey that led him from childhood dreams of teaching, through family rejection and healing, to founding a nonprofit and homeschool program for LGBTQ+ families. His story weaves together resilience, faith, and a fierce commitment to creating the safe, affirming learning spaces he wanted for his own children.


    Listeners will learn:

    • How trauma shaped Tyson’s early relationship with education
    • What inspired his self-help book Courageous Love: A Self-Help Guide for Gay Fathers
    • How personal experiences as a gay father led to creating a homeschool academy
    • The intersections of faith, healing, and queer leadership
    • Practical ways to build belonging when institutions fall short


    If this episode moves you, please subscribe, leave a review, and share Teaching While Queer with a colleague who needs community today.


    Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.



    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 min
  • Six Promises for Queer Educators in 2026 | Ep. 187 (with Bryan Stanton)
    Jan 1 2026

    In this New Year continuation of the December 25th reflection, host Bryan Stanton (they/them) turns from reflection to direction.


    This solo episode names six promises—practices, boundaries, and strategies—for queer educators in 2026, and closes with a powerful New Year’s blessing rooted in the realities of today’s classrooms.


    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • How to define success beyond survival.
    • Ways to bring queer truth into curriculum safely and meaningfully.
    • What sustainable visibility looks like for educators under scrutiny.
    • How to interrupt bias and harm in real time.
    • Why joy, boundaries, and community are professional practices.
    • A closing blessing of hope, protection, and belonging for the year ahead.


    If this message resonates, share this episode with one educator who needs it, and leave a review to help Teaching While Queer reach others who teach while surviving and thriving.


    Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    Keywords:

    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.


    boundaries, visibility, curriculum, student support, policy climate, joy as resistance, burnout recovery, community care, reflection, identity safety, belonging, professional sustainability, K–12, higher ed, admin, arts educator, Healing, burnout, and sustainability, Newly out at work, Student support & classroom practice, Hostile policy climate / crisis weeks

    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    16 min
  • Educate, Advocate, Celebrate: What Queer Educators Built in 2025 | Ep. 186 (with Bryan Stanton)
    Dec 25 2025

    This year, queer educators didn’t just survive — we built something that can outlast the moment. 🌈 In this reflective solo episode, host Bryan Stanton (they/them) revisits the major themes that shaped 2025 for LGBTQ+ teachers: quiet resistance, authentic storytelling, and the radical act of joy. From the Teaching While Queer Educators Conference to episodes that redefined advocacy, Bryan invites listeners to pause, reflect, and name the impact they’ve made — even when no one was watching.


    This episode is for every LGBTQ+ educator, school counselor, or ally who needs a reminder that strategy and community—not perfection—are what sustain us.


    You’ll learn:

    • How “quiet power” became a model for queer resistance in 2025
    • Why self-care isn’t enough — and what true institutional support looks like
    • The revolutionary lessons from the Teaching While Queer Educators Conference
    • How storytelling is strategy, not an afterthought
    • Why joy is a professional and political act


    About Our Host:

    Bryan Stanton (they/them) is the founder and host of Teaching While Queer, an educator, theatre artist, and advocate for LGBTQ+ inclusion in schools. Their work centers on helping educators find sustainable, justice-rooted ways to show up fully—without erasing themselves in the process.


    Call to Action:

    🎧 Listen wherever you get your podcasts

    💬 Share this episode with one educator who needs it

    🖥️ Visit teachingwhilequeer.org

    📱 Follow @TeachingWhileQueer


    Keywords: queer educators, LGBTQ teachers, inclusive classrooms, quiet resistance, teacher burnout, queer storytelling, educator community, queer joy in education


    Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.



    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    18 min
  • When “Inclusion” Means Erasure: Decolonizing Holiday Practices in Schools | Ep. 185 (with Bryan Stanton)
    Dec 11 2025

    This episode is for educators — especially queer teachers, principals, and school leaders — who care deeply about real inclusion and belonging. Bryan Stanton (they/them) unpacks how well-intentioned “inclusive” classroom practices often end up reinforcing Christian dominance, sidelining Jewish, Muslim, Pagan, and secular families. Together, we’ll examine how public schools perpetuate cultural erasure under the banner of “neutrality,” and what authentic pluralism can look like in action.


    You’ll Learn:

    • How “inclusive” school traditions often reinforce Christian cultural norms
    • Why neutrality isn’t neutral — and how law, culture, and faith intersect in public schools
    • What exclusion looks like for Jewish, Muslim, Pagan, and secular students
    • How queer educators can model pluralistic inclusion rooted in justice and empathy
    • Concrete strategies for creating classrooms that honor all identities and beliefs


    Call to Action:

    🎧 Listen wherever you get your podcasts

    💬 Subscribe & leave a review to support queer educators

    🌐 Visit teachingwhilequeer.org

    📱 Follow @TeachingWhileQueer

    Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    Keywords: inclusive education, queer educators, religious diversity in schools, pluralism in classrooms, decolonizing education, Christian dominance in schools, LGBTQ teachers, holiday inclusion


    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.



    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    20 min
  • How Music Educators Can Build Queer-Inclusive Classrooms | Ep. 184 (with Dr. Justin Caithaml)
    Dec 4 2025

    For music and performing arts educators striving to create affirming spaces for every student — this episode is for you. Bryan (they/them) sits down with Dr. Justin Caithaml) (they/them), Assistant Professor of Music Education at the University of Bridgeport, to explore how gender, sexuality, and policy intersect in the music classroom. Together, they unpack how queer educators can balance authenticity, safety, and advocacy — both for themselves and their students.


    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • How to design inclusive classroom “policies” — from pronouns to physical space to performance practices
    • Why separating imagined harm from actual harm matters for LGBTQ+ policy decisions
    • Ways administrators can better protect and empower queer educators
    • How music and theatre can model gender expansiveness and disrupt harmful binaries
    • Why “being bold” and visible creates space for the next generation of queer educators

    About Our Guest:

    🎵 Dr. Justin Caithaml (they/them) is an Assistant Professor of Music & Music Education at the University of Bridgeport. A nonbinary and bisexual scholar, their research explores the intersections of gender, sexuality, discourse, and policy in music education. Their work advocates for affirming practices that allow both teachers and students to thrive authentically within educational systems.


    Listen & Connect:

    🎧 Listen now wherever you get your podcasts

    💌 Subscribe and leave a review to support queer educator storytelling

    🌐 Visit teachingwhilequeer.org

    📱 Follow @TeachingWhileQueer

    🛍 Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!


    Resources & Links
    • Book: Honoring Trans and Gender Expansive Students in Music Education by Joshua Palkki & Matthew Garrett
    • Book: Who’s Afraid of Gender? by Judith Butler (2024)
    • Article: Jones, Hard and Soft Policies in Music Education
    • Dr. Caithaml’s Research: University of Bridgeport Faculty Page

    Keywords

    queer music education, inclusive classrooms, LGBTQ teachers, gender-affirming schools, performing arts equity, nonbinary educators, educational policy reform


    This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.




    The podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    49 min
  • How Queer Educators Can Interrupt Bias & Model Brave Conversations | Ep. 183 (with Sean McGill)
    Nov 20 2025
    This episode is for teachers, school leaders, and DEI facilitators who want to create more inclusive classrooms while navigating fear, burnout, and systemic bias. Bryan (they/them) talks with Sean McGill (he/him) — a Chicago-based educator, anti-bias facilitator, and doctoral researcher — about what it means to teach, train, and show up authentically as a queer man across classrooms, police academies, and digital spaces.Listeners will learn how to:Interrupt bias in real time — even when you don’t know exactly what to sayModel queer authenticity safely in K–12 and adult learning environmentsBuild plans for bias response before harm happensTeach digital media literacy to help students recognize online hate and misinformationBalance vulnerability, safety, and advocacy in conservative or high-stakes contextsSean also shares insights from his upcoming dissertation on inclusive education and how his fourth-grade classroom became a model for age-appropriate queer visibility.Key TakeawaysSilence is complicity. When bias shows up, saying something matters more than saying it perfectly.Representation saves energy. Being visibly queer in education helps students imagine new possibilities for themselves.Digital literacy is bias literacy. Our media habits shape our worldviews and fuel polarization.Bias management > bias elimination. Awareness and response are the skills we must actually teach.Bravery is a muscle. The more we lean into discomfort, the stronger our justice practice becomes.About Our GuestSean McGill (he/him) is a Chicago-based educator, facilitator, and doctoral candidate in Curriculum, Advocacy, and Policy at National Louis University. A former Chicago Public Schools teacher, Sean has spent over a decade leading anti-bias and digital literacy workshops for students, educators, and law enforcement nationwide. His work centers inclusive education, identity visibility, and the power of conversation to interrupt systemic harm.Support the podcast and spread the message with merch from Equalitees.Me!This podcast explores the challenges and successes of queer representation in education, tackling topics like burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the role of advocacy in building inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies. It centers support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers, and addresses how gender identity in schools can be honored to combat isolation and foster community.Resources & LinksMuseum of Tolerance – Combat Hate ProgramThe Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt (2024)National Louis University – Ed.D. in Curriculum, Advocacy, and PolicyTeaching While Queer Keywordsqueer educators, bias interruption, inclusive education, digital media literacy, LGBTQ teachers, anti-bias training, queer representation in schools, managing implicit biasThe podcast explores the challenges and successes of Queer representation in education, addressing issues such as burnout, tokenism, doxing, and the importance of advocacy in creating inclusive classrooms, safe spaces, and anti-bullying strategies, with a focus on supporting gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, asexual, aromantic, agender, two-spirit, and non-binary teachers and gender identity in schools to combat the feeling of isolation and lack of community. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    52 min