Trans Etiquette
Developed by the Division of Student Life
- Respect everyone’s self-identification.
- Do not ask a person’s birth or legal name. If you know it, refuse to use it.
- Use a person’s correct name and pronouns.
- If you don’t know what pronouns or gender labels are correct, ask politely.
- If you make a mistake, apologize, move on, and do better.
- Always affirm (never challenge) a trans person’s gender identity and expression.
- Do not ask private, personal, or invasive questions (ask yourself: is it relevant or my business?).
- If you have general questions, try Google first.
- If you really want to understand a trans person’s experience, ask permission to ask questions.
- Be careful of your phrasing (never say “when you were a girl” or “Jack was born a woman” because Jack has always been a man, it’s just that everyone else made assumptions about Jack based on the appearance of his body).
- Be aware of your setting (staff meeting may not be the time for a trans chat).
- Don’t make assumptions about a person’s transition process.
- Don’t ask if someone is sure they are trans.
- Don’t tell a trans person how hard or uncomfortable this is for you.
- Don’t offer advice for being “read as” a particular gender (ie: “If you just wore a little lipstick…”).
- Do not “out” a trans person.
- Don’t say “transgendered."
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