• @[email protected]
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    492 months ago

    It wasn’t even just him. Apparently, there were multiple trans students deadnamed. So it’s not just an accident for one person.

  • BougieBirdie
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    212 months ago

    Alberta is the part of Canada that makes me feel ashamed to be Canadian :(

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I’m sure it’s not, but I’d like to give the benefit of the doubt that the Yearbook Adviser just had the names auto-import from the district database and didn’t change to nicknames or names students go by. It’s a big job to go through a thousand names and make change those that are wrong. Using the registered name is usually a safe bet.

    edit: For those who are downvoting, what strategy would you use to find out the names every student is know by? Teachers have trouble getting work back from the students in their classroom, so imagine how hard this would be to do with a thousand people you’ve never met. There may be a good method, but I can’t think of it.

    edit 2: I guarantee a teacher is in charge of the yearbook because admins would never touch that kind of work. Teachers usually fail the students because of being overworked and essentially sabotaged by admins and the government (and sadly even parents). They usually stay teaching because they care about the students. They don’t have time or the will to be malicious.

    edit 3: Final (hopefully) Another thought… Did the yearbook staff (students who make the yearbook) speak up about this before publishing the book? Most yearbooks are 90%+ student-made.

    edit 4: Final thought… It is important to call people by their chosen names—whether or not this lines up with their names assigned at birth. I am hoping this time it was a mistake caused by the impossible job of being a teacher and not from bigotry. I think the best solution would be something systematic: Every computer system that stores a human’s name needs to have a “goes by” field.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 months ago

      Yeah, the school has around 1500 kids, so I’m sure you’re right, especially since they took action as soon as they were notified of the mistake.

    • subignition
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      62 months ago

      Everyone who appears in a yearbook typically has a special photo taken for it. It would not be that hard to take a moment at that time to check whether the student has a preferred name

      • @[email protected]
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        92 months ago

        How would you ask the students?

        The portraits are usually done by a third party photography company, and schools aren’t going to pay extra to have that company ask.

      • @zaph
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        92 months ago

        Dog the school is working to fix it. Why would you be so toxic to someone trying to give the benefit of the doubt to people we already know are overworked and underpaid?

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          We had this when I was in high school over 20 years ago… You filled out a card on picture day with the name you wanted in the yearbook

          • @zaph
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            42 months ago

            That’s pretty smart. My school just used whatever name you had on file and if you wanted something different you had to let the vice principal know on picture day. She was sitting next to the photographer because she was also the librarian and that’s where we took the pics.

      • @[email protected]
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        82 months ago

        Looking at your post history, you seem to often add valuable insights to the stuff posted on Lemmy.

        Do you have an efficient way to accurately use the method you’re describing? Teachers literally never finish everything that’s dumped on their plate in a year, and publishing a book with the memories of a thousand people is already a monstrous undertaking.

        Let’s shame those who look to harm others, but if someone has made a mistake, let’s help them grow to be a part of making this world a better place.