Zoeken in onze collecties: Hulp nodig  

Filter resultaten op:

Materiaalsoort:

Toegang

Taal

Jaar van uitgave

Aantal resultaten: 6( DE:"kinderen van biseksuelen" )

Artikel

Adolescent Perceptions of School Safety for Students with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Parents  / Stephen T. Russell ... [et al.].

Journal of LGBT Youth, 5 (2008) 4, p. 11-27
bron: Journal of LGBT Youth jaargang: 5 (2008) 4 , p. 11-27
samenvatting: A growing body of research indicates that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) students are often unsafe at school. Little research has examined school safety for students with LGBT parents. We examined adolescents' perceptions of school safety for students with LGBT parents using data from a survey of 2,302 California sixth through twelfth grade students. We examined the influence of adolescents' personal characteristics and school environments on perceptions of school safety for students with LGBT parents. Compared to heterosexual students, adolescents who identified as LGBT were less likely to perceive their schools as safe for students with LGBT parents. Students who received education on LGBT issues knew where to get information about LGBT issues and had teachers that step in to prevent harassment were more likely to say that their schools were safe for students with LGBT parents. Implications for educational policy and practice are discussed. [ Copies are available at http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/haworth-journals.asp ]
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Adolescent Perceptions of School Safety for Students with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Parents
ts.
Stephen T. Russell ... [et al.].
Journal of LGBT Youth
5
(2008)
4
11-27
N286701
Artikel

Queerspawn and Their Families : Psychotherapy with LGBTQ Families  / Tasha Jackson Fitzgerald.

Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health, 14 (2010) 2 (april), p. 155-162
bron: Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health jaargang: 14 (2010) 2 (april), p. 155-162
samenvatting: Issues faced by children with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ) parents, also called queerspawn, are discussed. Common issues include children defending their parents, children's determination of when it is safe to share openly about their family, the process of the parents coming out to their children, and parents feeling pressure to conform to their notion of "perfect." Treatment recommendations for working with queer families in psychotherapy are suggested. [ Copies are available at http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/haworth-journals.asp ]
onderwerpen:

signatuur: dgb artikelen

Queerspawn and Their Families : Psychotherapy with LGBTQ Families
dgb artikelen
Tasha Jackson Fitzgerald.
Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health
14
(2010)
2
(april)
155-162
N288919
Artikel

Nonmetropolitan GLBTQ Parents : When and Where Does Their Sexuality Matter?  / Elizabeth G. Holman, Ramona F. Oswald.

Journal of GLBT Family Studies, 7 (2011) 5 (oct-dec), p. 436-456
bron: Journal of GLBT Family Studies jaargang: 7 (2011) 5 (oct-dec), p. 436-456
samenvatting: Twenty-two parents, representing 15 GLBTQ-parent families living in nonmetropolitan communities in Illinois, were interviewed about their interactions with others in community settings. A total of 345 interactions were coded by sexual orientation salience (no, yes) and setting (private, public, organizational). Roughly half of the interactions (N = 156, 45%) were those in which parents said that their sexual orientation did not matter; nonsalience was more likely to occur in private or organizational settings rather than public. Regarding salience, parents described a slightly higher proportion of interactions in which their sexual orientation did matter (N = 189, 55%). Of these, salience was most likely to occur in organizational settings rather than public or private. Parents most commonly described salience that occurred in organizational settings as negative rather than positive. Regarding desired resources, parents prioritized support and socialization for their children rather than for themselves, but they desired resources that clearly identified their children as having GLBTQ parents (i.e., resources where parental sexual orientation was salient). These findings suggest a strong recommendation for improving organizational policies related to education, health care, employment, and family services so that GLBTQ parents and their children are openly acknowledged by staff without negative overtones. [ Copies are available at http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/haworth-journals.asp ]
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Nonmetropolitan GLBTQ Parents : When and Where Does Their Sexuality Matter?
ts.
Elizabeth G. Holman, Ramona F. Oswald.
Journal of GLBT Family Studies
7
(2011)
5
(oct-dec)
436-456
N292018
Grijs

Coming Out About My Parents : Adults with Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Parents in the Netherlands  / Eleni Demetriou.

Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA), 2015 - 40 p.
uitgave: Amsterdam : Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA), 2015 - 40 p.
onderwerpen:
thema:
  1. coming out/outing
  2. homoseksualiteit
samenvatting: Onderzoek naar coming out ervaringen van volwassen kinderen van holebi-ouders.

signatuur: cat. (demet/com)

dgb grijs

toegang:
Coming Out About My Parents : Adults with Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Parents in the Netherlands
cat. (demet/com)dgb grijs
N297455
Artikel

Bisexual Identity in the Context of Parenthood: An Exploratory Qualitative Study of Self-Identified Bisexual Parents in the United States  / Elizabeth Bartelt ... [et al.].

Journal of Bisexuality, 17 (2017) 4 (oct-dec), p. 378-399
bron: Journal of Bisexuality jaargang: 17 (2017) 4 (oct-dec), p. 378-399
samenvatting: Bisexual parents constitute the largest proportion of 'lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) parents' yet are largely absent from previous research. As parenting and sexual identity may be significant pieces of one's self-concept, examining bisexual parents? experiences and sexual identity formation is important. This qualitative study used phone interviews with 33 self-identified bisexual parents in the United States with at least one child (including genetic, adopted, step, or foster). Participants were between ages 22 and 65 years, and the majority were non-Hispanic White. The authors thematically analyzed interview data using Dedoose. Participants described experiencing biphobia as a barrier to understanding their identity or coming out to others, including their children. Despite misconceptions about bisexuality, parents reported pride in their identity and more openness to and understanding of their children. Developing resources to navigate biphobia and identity disclosure in the context of parenting may build community and reduce stress.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Bisexual Identity in the Context of Parenthood: An Exploratory Qualitative Study of Self-Identified Bisexual Parents in the United States
ts.
Elizabeth Bartelt ... [et al.].
Journal of Bisexuality
17
(2017)
4
(oct-dec)
378-399
N301958
Artikel

Making visible the invisible: Bisexual parents ponder coming out to their kids  / Abbey Berghaus.

Sexualities, 24 (2021) 3 (mar), p. 341-369
bron: Sexualities jaargang: 24 (2021) 3 (mar), p. 341-369
samenvatting: Unlike straight or gay parents whose sexuality is often made obvious to their children based on the gender composition of their relationships, bisexual and other non-monosexual parents are regularly and inaccurately assumed to be straight or gay. As a result, bisexuals in both same-gender and mixed-gender relationships must choose whether or not to come out to their children. This article uses data from an online survey of 767 US parents and explores reasons that bisexual parents offered when discussing their plans to come out or not come out to their children. Using a qualitative, thematic analysis of the open-ended question "Do you plan to tell your children about your sexual orientation? Why or why not?", this article demonstrates that bisexuals planned to come out in order to educate their children on diversity, to encourage their children to be allies, to combat bisexual erasure, to promote honest communication, to convey solidarity to their LGBTQ+ children, and for necessary logistical reasons. Some parents did not plan to come out to their children, explaining that their sexuality was private, shameful, or confusing. Others said they would come out if asked, or if their children were also queer. These motivations relate to bisexual parents' unique experiences with binegativity and erasure.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Making visible the invisible: Bisexual parents ponder coming out to their kids
ts.
Abbey Berghaus.
Sexualities
24
(2021)
3
(mar)
341-369
N308609

Query:

( DE:"kinderen van biseksuelen" )

URL (decoded):

&q=( DE:"kinderen van biseksuelen" )&start=0&rows=10&facet=on&facet.field=W1&facet.query=jaar_vz:[* TO 1959]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1960 TO 1969]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1970 TO 1979]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1980 TO 1989]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1990 TO 1999]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[2000 TO 2009]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[2010 TO *]&facet.query=DC:OpenUp&facet.field=LA&facet.field=VO&facet.field=VO_EN&facet.field=TH&facet.field=TA&facet.field=TA_EN&facet.mincount=1&hl=on&hl.fl=BS,IR,BIO&hl.simple.pre=&hl.simple.post=&sort=B desc

URL (encoded):

&q=%28+DE%3A%22kinderen+van+biseksuelen%22+%29&start=0&rows=10&facet=on&facet.field=W1&facet.query=jaar_vz:[*+TO+1959]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1960+TO+1969]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1970+TO+1979]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1980+TO+1989]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[1990+TO+1999]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[2000+TO+2009]&facet.query=jaar_vz:[2010+TO+*]&facet.query=DC%3AOpenUp&facet.field=LA&facet.field=VO&facet.field=VO_EN&facet.field=TH&facet.field=TA&facet.field=TA_EN&facet.mincount=1&hl=on&hl.fl=BS,IR,BIO&hl.simple.pre=&hl.simple.post=&sort=B%20desc

searching...

searching...