Untapped Potential: Understanding How LGBQ Students Use Dating Applications to Explore, Develop, and Learn about Their Sexual Identities

Q2 Social Sciences
N. Havey
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

LGBQ college students are at a distinct disadvantage when it comes to sexual education. An early lack of information has negative implications for LGBQ college students’ sexual identity development, sexual exploration, and mental and physical health. Similarly, heterosexist stigmatization of queer sexualities makes it difficult for students to openly explore their sexualities. Many LGBQ students may need a compensatory sex ed experience and better access to healthcare and the information their heterosexual peers have. This qualitative, narrative-based study examines how LGBQ college students explore their sexualities, develop their sexual identities, and learn about their communities through internet-based dating and sex applications. These apps serve as virtually mediated environments that make other queer people easier to find, communicate with, and learn from; institutions of higher education can learn from the kinship networks these students find and create online.
未开发的潜力:了解LGBQ学生如何使用约会应用程序来探索、发展和了解他们的性身份
LGBQ大学生在性教育方面处于明显的劣势。早期缺乏信息对LGBQ大学生的性认同发展、性探索以及身心健康有负面影响。同样,异性恋者对酷儿性取向的污名化使学生很难公开探索自己的性取向。许多LGBQ学生可能需要一次补偿性的性教育经历,以及更好地获得医疗保健和异性恋同龄人所掌握的信息。这项基于叙事的定性研究考察了LGBQ大学生如何通过基于互联网的约会和性应用程序探索自己的性取向,发展自己的性身份,并了解自己的社区。这些应用程序实际上是一个中介环境,使其他酷儿更容易找到、交流和学习;高等教育机构可以从这些学生在网上找到并创建的亲属关系网络中学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education
Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
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