Women's Colleges Should Accept Transgender Students

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Female institutions have changed throughout the years to accommodate the 21st century generation. Women’s colleges started forming with the purpose to advance the rights of women and allow them to have a place for themselves where they can practice those rights. However, today they have started admitting transgender applicants which has sparked a debate amongst people because of the many opinions there are on admitting someone who has changed their birth gender to the opposite gender into an institution that was made to educate women and women only. Some argue that women’s colleges should remove any and all strict policies and admit transgender students because they have the right to not be discriminated against. However others think that there …show more content…

Many women’s colleges are now starting to accept transgender students because of the fear of losing federal funding, but have put policies in place directed specifically towards them. Some policies are over the top strict and may make one feel as if they need to change themselves completely to be considered “equal”, such as Hollins Universities which states that transgender students before applying must “[undergo] hormone therapy with the intent to transform anatomically from female to male, [have undergone] any surgical process (procedure) to transform from female to male or [have changed their] legal name with the intent of identifying as a man” (Hollins University par. 5). Policies like these challenge transgender students and make them feel as if they are not accepted for who they are as said in the article “Who are Women’s Colleges For?” by Kierra Feldman where a transgender student who chose to remain anonymous for their own personal reasons states “It’s way harder to get your gender stuff lined up for an application to Smith than it is to get it together for a passport change, and that’s really saying something…Having to go back and change documents from high school felt like I was being asked to ‘cover my tracks’” (quoted by Kierra Feldman par. 15). Carrie Preston, a director of the Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies Program, states that “If women’s colleges respond by petitioning for exemptions, they repeat the actions of misogynistic institutions in the 1970s.” (Preston par. 5). Meaning that women’s colleges that choose not to accept transgender students are committing the same acts of discrimination that men were committing against women. Transgender individuals have rights and it is our duty to

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