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LGBT Issues in Norwegian Textbooks
Author(s) -
Bjørn Smestad
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nordic journal of comparative and international education (njcie)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2535-4051
DOI - 10.7577/njcie.2208
Subject(s) - norwegian , lesbian , heteronormativity , inclusion (mineral) , sociology , homosexuality , pedagogy , gender studies , curriculum , perspective (graphical) , psychology , human sexuality , art , linguistics , visual arts , philosophy
In Norway, a model for schools’ teaching about LGBT issues is chosen where the responsibility is divided between different school subjects: social science, natural science, RLE (religion, philosophies of life and ethics), Norwegian and English. This article looks at how this is implemented in the textbooks. 129 textbooks in Norwegian primary and lower secondary education (grades 1–10) are analysed. Of these, 246 textbook pages included LGBT issues. In this article, I discuss how LGBT issues are included in Norwegian textbooks and how the divided responsibility between school subjects work. The most striking finding is that of the five subjects, English and Norwegian have the least demanding curriculum goals, but still the largest number of pages related to LGBT issues. The inclusion of fictional voices makes possible a nomadic perspective (observing issues from multiple perspectives). It is also striking that about half of the textbook pages are in 10th grade textbooks. Heteronormativity is still a problem, and bisexual and transgendered people are far less visible than lesbian and gay people are.

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