Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Students Stage Massive Walkout After Lesbian Teacher Is 'Marched Off Campus' Over 'Safe Space' Sticker

Students Stage Massive Walkout After Lesbian Teacher Is 'Marched Off Campus' Over 'Safe Space' Sticker
DFW News

On Wednesday, students at the MacArthur High School in Irving, Texas performed a walkout after the school allegedly engaged in "targeted discrimination" against LGBT+ children and teachers.

Students marched out of their classrooms wearing rainbow hearts that had previously been used to mark safe spaces in the school. Only a few weeks prior, those stickers had been removed without warning.


Rachel Stonecipher is an English teacher and sponsor of the campus' Gay Straight Alliance. She kept the stickers on her door as one of the few openly lesbian teachers in the school.

Stonecipher told DFW News:

"I was freaked. The kids were freaked out."
"I was a little scared too because I'm the only openly, very obviously gay teacher, lesbian teacher."

Stonecipher was one of many teachers looking for answers from the school administration.

A memo was sent to staff by the principal:

"We want to send a different tone this year."
"The district's position is that our responsibility is to make campuses a safe zone for all students, not just in our classrooms, but on every inch of our campus."
"To ensure that all students feel safe regardless of background or identity, the district has developed guidelines to ensure that posters, banners and stickers placed in classrooms, hallways or offices are curriculum driven and neutral in viewpoint."

It also said teachers need to keep their personal opinions on their personal time, essentially claiming the safe space for LGBTQ+ students stickers are political or sectarian.


A spokesperson told CBS11 the policy states:

"Teachers shall not use the classroom to transmit personal beliefs regarding political or sectarian issues."

Students had previously gone to the school board to express their concerns about removing the stickers. It was a way students knew who they could turn to for help.

Tensions grew after several students who were previously known to attend the Gay Straight Alliance meetings were "randomly" questioned by administration.

Sophomore Alyssa Harbin described to board members she sat at the head of a table for a 45 minute interview that felt more like a "long, drawn out interrogation."

She said:

"All of these randomly selected people have been to at least one Gay Straight Alliance meeting making it feel extremely targeted."

Stonecipher was escorted off campus last week.

Junior Breanna Belvin told trustees:

"GSA students are also extremely concerned for one of our sponsors, Ms. Stonecipher."

Students have gotten an outpouring of support on social media, calling out the board and everyone enforcing this "neutrality" policy.












Belvin said Stonecipher has not been seen at school since she was removed from class last week by administrators.

No one in administration nor Stonecipher could comment on her employment status or being removed from campus.

She did send a message to all those holding signs with her name on it at the protest:

"I'm fine. The kids don't need to be concerned about me."
"Look, this job is way too hard, way too hard to be a teacher for us not to be here because we care."

Stonecipher said, stickers or not, there are teachers at MacArthur High School that will always be allies to the LGBTQ+ students.

According to Irving Weekly, two teachers who refused to take down their safe space stickers were disciplined by the principal for taking a stand. Students became very upset after learning about this.

Irving ISD provided a statement about the walkout:

"Irving ISD is aware of the walkout protest that is currently taking place at MacArthur High School. All students are safe."

Several protests against anti-LGBTQ+ policies have been cropping up across the country. Students and teachers alike have been standing up against discrimination towards LGBTQ+ community members.

A California Catholic high school threatened outing a gay student to her parents. 200 students protested outside Bishop Amat Memorial High School for forcing disciplinary meetings and counseling and barring the gay student from sitting next to her girlfriend at lunch.

In August, around 50 students at Valor Christian High School walked out to show support for LGBTQ students and to tell administration they will not tolerate bigotry or discrimination. A volleyball coach was allegedly forced to resign after school officials learned of his sexuality.

A peaceful protest was formed at the Niles New Tech school in Michigan after the school did next to nothing after an LGBTQ+ student was bullied and told to kill themselves. One student said ever since they came to the school they had homophobic slurs thrown their way and they demanded the school put a stop to it.

A protest for the suspension of a teacher who came out as bisexual happened earlier this month at Winterset High School in Iowa. Students launched a petition which currently has over 4,000 signatures. Their goal is 5,000 signatures.

Thanks to the power of social media, it's become increasingly harder for schools to hide their anti-LGBTQ+ policies and the lawsuits they will fight to the bitter end at a huge cost to taxpayers or private school budgets.

Meanwhile, not being homophobic or transphobic is free.

More from News/lgbtq

Elon Musk; Matt Gaetz
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Elon Musk Mocked For Hilariously Wrong Prediction About Matt Gaetz—And Yeah, That Did Not Age Well

After former Florida congressman Matt Gaetz dropped out of contention for President-elect Donald Trump's Attorney General post, a hilariously over the top post from billionaire Elon Musk—who is tapped to lead Trump's "Department" of Government Efficiency—resurfaced that showcases how wrong Musk was about Gaetz's future within the second Trump administration.

Gaetz was previously the subject of a Justice Department investigation into alleged sex trafficking involving a 17-year-old girl and has faced scrutiny from the House Ethics Committee over accusations of sexual misconduct. However, that inquiry effectively concluded last week when Gaetz announced his resignation from Congress.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Abby Phillip and Bruce LeVell
CNN

CNN Host Shuts Down Conservative For Calling Female Guest 'Dear'—And People Are Cheering

CNN host Abby Phillip stepped in after Bruce LeVell—the former executive director of President-elect Donald Trump’s 2016 National Diversity Coalition—called Democratic strategist Jennifer Roginsky "dear" during a panel discussion.

The panel had convened to discuss the sex trafficking allegations about former Florida congressman Matt Gaetz, who yesterday withdrew his name from consideration for being Trump's pick for Attorney General.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billy Bob Thornton
Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

Billy Bob Thornton Gets Hilariously Candid About Why He Wears Women's Jeans

Actor Billy Bob Thornton has a unique style all his own and he specifically talked about his clothing preference not found in the men's section.

During an appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show Thornton revealed he likes wearing women's jeans and explained why.

Keep ReadingShow less
Florence Pugh
Marleen Moise/Getty Images

Florence Pugh Shares 'Mind-Boggling' Health Diagnosis In Powerful Reminder To Women

27-year-old actress Florence Pugh reminded fans this week of the importance of performing regular health checks, especially when your body seems to be telling you something.

While on the She MD Podcast, Pugh explained that she'd been experiencing some pain and discomfort, and at one point, she was "having weird dreams" and she just had a "sudden feeling" that she needed to go to the doctor.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jay Leno
Inside Edition

Heavily-Bruised Jay Leno Opens Up About Nasty Fall The Left Him Wearing An Eye Patch

Former Tonight Show host Jay Leno revealed what led to him getting bruised up and wearing an eye patch.

The 74-year-old comedian, also known for his Primetime talk show The Jay Leno Show, spoke to TMZ and Inside Edition about having a bad fall on Saturday night while he was staying at a hotel on top of a hill.

Keep ReadingShow less