Let me just dive right in. I do
not disagree with the value of sharing your pronouns. As a college professor, I
SOMETIMES do that during my classes. The key here is the word sometimes. So
really this starts with when I find this practice inclusive, and what are some
situations that the practice can be exclusive.
I ALWAYS ask my students in the pre-class survey, which is only for me to see, to share their pronouns with me. The wording I use is very simple: "what are your pronouns?" I also don’t make it a mandatory question for them to answer. Most often, especially in an Engineering discipline, everyone is either he/him/his or she/her/hers.
The value of this pre-class survey
question is for me to see if there is anyone in my class that actually would
appreciate a bit of support to feel more included in the class environment. I
do understand the struggles one may experience because the group does not
recognize how they see themselves, or the unique opinion they have as
legitimate.
If I see anyone in my class that
I recognize need that support, I lead by example and share my pronouns with the
class through my email communications, my first-session introduction in class,
and across the discussion forums that class may have.
I do also encourage students to
share their pronouns. I say something vague like “as creating an inclusive
class environment is very important for everyone’s learning, I encourage you to
also share your pronouns when you are introducing yourself.”
I don’t make it mandatory; as
doing so would make the practice exclusive to students who have doubts and are uncomfortable
sharing their pronouns.
So yes I only do use this inclusion
tool SOMETIMES. The next key point I just mentioned is that sharing pronouns is
a tool. And as such, sharing pronouns inherits the most obvious characteristic
of tools: they are extremely useful when used in an appropriate setting and
useless and even harmful if used in inappropriate settings.
But what harms sharing pronouns
could have? Good question.
Establishing a culture where there
is an extra emphasis on saying the correct pronouns can be actually exclusive
to other groups of people. I will share a couple of examples.
I’ll use myself as the first
example. I grew up in Iran and my mother tongue is Farsi. Farsi is a
completely genderless language. At no point in my growing up did I have to get
used to saying the correct gender pronouns and it comes with an extra effort
that I need to pay attention to say the correct English pronouns. In normal
settings, I am comfortable as if I make a mistake and apologize and even make a
joke about how non-sexist I am. Well, the joke depends on my relationships.
However, the idea of walking into space in which saying the correct pronouns
are so important that if I make mistakes everyone's head, literally or figuratively,
is going to turn just sounds daunting to me. So normally, if I am tired or I
don’t really have to go, I excuse myself. Bam! I am excluded from the group
because an inclusive tool was used to make the space more inclusive.
The next example is more
general. The basis of it is that not everyone is as brave as the LGBTQ+ community
to have discovered their alternative, or non-conforming identities. I do admire
when individuals defy the societal norms and are brave to be themselves. What I
don’t admire is because some individuals see it as their priorities to present
themselves authentically, it is also assumed it should be the goal of other
people. It takes energy to be authentic in a society that punishes you for
non-conformity. Some students in the class might not want to invest their one
precious life in the fight for authenticity and want to conform to society. The
sharing pronouns tool will be exclusive to those people as they have to learn
in a space that they have to be reminded they are living a lie. Them having to
share their pronouns might be another lie that they have to tell themselves and
tell the world. The self-deception could also be subconscious and those
individuals just know that they don’t like something about the sharing pronouns
practice.
As it is bad to force individuals to conform to what society sees as okay, it is equally bad to force individuals to let go of the comfort of conforming.
A non-useful usage of the sharing
your pronouns where there is no-one to benefit from the normalization of
non-conforming pronouns is only exclusive to those who find the policy as a reminder
that they are lying to themselves.
The third example is about
the exclusive nature of such polices on people who do not feel comfortable with
any identity. Some people choose to live a life that its first and foremost goal
is to avoid forming identities. For instance, they don’t identify with male or
female. They do know they are male or female but it is not a matter of identity
for them. Rather, it is a matter of fact. If you mistake their gender they will
only laugh it off and will tell you who cares if you thought they were male or
female. However, those people do feel uncomfortable to be in a space that
proclaiming a gender identity has become a social duty.
The last example is about
people’s different verbal and language skills. Not everyone talks as easily and
for some speaking coherently may be an ongoing challenge during a meeting such
as a classroom. People with a speech impediment might also find the extra
effort that they have to put on remembering everyone’s name and using the
correct pronouns daunting. Humans have only so much attention resources and if
the demand for a situation exceeds the capacity of a person, they will recoil from
participation.
As I professed in the first sentence, I do see the values of
the tool sharing pronouns as a device for all of the highly reverenced words in the academic circles: diversity, inclusion, equity and social justice. However, like any other medicine, it does also have
side effects, and if it is regarded as a general tool that can be applied to
any campus, any classroom, or society, I am afraid that’s just too simplistic
and can be also exclusive.

I'd never seen this matter from the viewpoint you considered. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. It's interesting I find some similar experiences of my own to the examples are mentioned. I see the point and I do agree with the side effects. The question comes to my mind though is that what would be the solution for these side effects? isn't our judgmental minds at the end responsible to make the right decision to when and where to ask the pronounce. If I wanted to borrow something from this blog, I would say this concern is exactly in the gray area of what we are dealing with in our life. There is no a binary border for using of it as a customized tool. Its nature has the property of generality. It's like the medicine example. It might not work on a person and shows the side effect on a body, but it's still on the table as a general cure and you always are open to take the risk and take the medicine to see how it goes unless the sides effects are much more than the benefits. If it doesn't work well, you will remember to not take it anymore. What I am trying to say is that we should keep one thing in our mind this culture of asking the pronounce is in the beginning of its own journey and always there are some exaggerated behavior that may bother others. It's all about the matter of time (regarding the first example). Taking into account of the side effects, I as an individual am responsible to make the decision of asking or not in different situations and try to learn from my experiences to know what kind of personalities or situations are better to not ask this question. There won't be any guarantee though to be always flawless. I think asking the pronounce is more useful rather than harmful at the end and it's better to spread the culture in this stage.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your thoughts. I am so glad that you got the essence of my post. I am not saying the tool is good or bad, I am just saying it has inclusive and exclusive impacts. One should use the tool once the inclusive impacts outweighs the exclusive ones.
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