You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Skip to main
Blog

Title IX and Back to School: What it Means for LGBTQ+ Young People

BY: Trevor News
Three individuals supporting each other.
Donate

It’s back to school season, and millions of young people across the country are returning for another academic year. Returning to school can bring up a multitude of feelings — excitement to see old friends and make new ones, anticipation of meeting new teachers, and even some nerves about more difficult course material. LGBTQ+ young people experience all of the same emotions when returning to school, but there’s often additional factors including  anxiety, depression, and other adverse mental health outcomes depending on how supportive and affirming their family, community, and school environment is. 

This past April, the U.S. Department of Education released the Final Rule under Title IX. The new rules represented a historic opportunity to advance explicit protections for LGBTQ+ young people against discrimination. The Trevor Project’s research has found that school policies play a significant role in LGBTQ+ young people’s mental health, with the presence of even one anti-LGBTQ+ policy being associated with higher rates of anxiety, depression, and past-year suicide attempts for young LGBTQ+ students. As such, the implementation of the new Title IX rule marked an important advancement in ensuring  safer schools for LGBTQ+ young people nationwide. 

While the rule went into effect on August 1, 2024, these updated protections for LGBTQ+ youth in every state were not an immediate reality. Lawsuits challenging the 2024 Rule have temporarily blocked the Rule from taking effect in 26 states and several individual schools across the country. Just last month, the 11th District Court of Appeals granted injunctive relief in the case State of Alabama, et al. v. U.S. Department of Education, et al., which reinstated the ban on the new Rule in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. 

This district ruling is particularly concerning given that LGBTQ+ youth in the South already report having increased past-year suicide attempts and less access to LGBTQ+ acceptance and affirming spaces when compared to other regions. Access to affirming spaces, including schools, is an essential component of reducing suicide risk among LGBTQ+ young people. 

In creating a world where all LGBTQ+ young people are safe and affirmed, we know that legal protections such as Title IX are only the baseline for creating LGBTQ+ inclusive schools. To ensure every LGBTQ+ young person can bring their authentic self to school every day, it’s essential that school administrators and staff review their protocols and  procedures to determine how they can best support students in their district. Resources such as The Trevor Project’s Affirming Schools Checklist and GLSEN can serve as a guide to support comprehensive policy updates and implementation. 


Information on Title IX and how to file a complaint with the Department is available on the Department of Education’s website.

Read more from
Blog

Blog

Authors Making a Difference: Celebrating Women’s History Month with a Panel of Women and Gender-Expansive Authors

Seeing ourselves in stories can be incredibly powerful. The Trevor Project’s editorial team invited three authors — Lamya H, Sarah Cypher, and Becky Albertalli — to talk about the importance of seeing women’s and LGBTQ+ experiences in books, and how they can help us better understand ourselves and be better allies to each other. Considering recent bans of LGBTQ+ books in school libraries, these authors show us why sharing authentic stories can help affirm young people and why reading mainstream LGBTQ+ books can be an act of resistance. Lamya H (she/they) is a queer Muslim writer and organizer living in…
Tyler and Carmen standing next to each other against a black background.
Blog

Act Now to Save Critical Suicide Prevention Services for LGBTQ+ Youth

Right now, LGBTQ+ young people across the country are in crisis. They're hearing messages of hate and rejection — not just from peers or online bullies, but from people and systems meant to protect them. Hostile and dangerous rhetoric has become increasingly mainstream. And recently, the administration gave us official notice that they will close the national suicide lifeline for LGBTQ+ youth, effective July 17, 2025. If this goes forward, our young people will be left with the message: “Your lives are not worth saving.” We refuse to let that message stand. That’s why today, we are taking action. Here…