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Is Your New Workplace an LGBT-Friendly International School?

It could very well be that you are going to an LGBTQ+ Friendly International School, but your host country culture is not.

It could very well be that you are going to an LGBT Friendly International School, but your host country’s culture is not.

The state of the matter is that LGBT international teachers need to consider additional things when they decide they would like to teach abroad at an international school.

Sometimes, neither the school nor the host country are not LGBT-friendly. Many LGBT-Friendly international school teachers would not choose to work in either of these situations for moral or safety reasons, while others might. Even when the laws of the host countries include the death penalty, some LGBT international school teachers have lived and worked there for many years with very few to no problems.

It is still a difficult choice to make, though, as there can be some potentially harmful, confusing, and even dangerous discrimination situations for LGBT international school educators in some countries around the world.

Therefore, it is very important to do your research and check out your prospective international school and see what they think (ask them these questions during your interview!). Take some time to examine the current laws related to LGBT people in the host country and the latest news articles about any possible recent events.

What do international teachers say about their LGBT-friendly International School

We scoured our database of international teacher-written comments and found 12 that stood out as among the most interesting and insightful comments on whether each of these schools and/or countries is LGBT-friendly.

1.

“There is a wide variety of teachers from different backgrounds. Age also varies widely. It is an LGBTQ+-friendly international school and accepts same-sex relationships. The turnover is normal for the size of the school. Many people stay longer than first intended…” – International School Manila (115 total comments)

2.

“Parents are not LGBT friendly – as a result, while the school does not have a particular bias, they cater to the parents…” – Peking University Experimental School (Jiaxing) (79 total comments)

3.

“Expats, with local Romanians as assistants and a few specialist positions.
Turnover is low, but should be lower for a great package in a great city.
LGBT friendly school, there are some ‘rules’ to follow for Romania in general.” – American International School Bucharest (137 total comments)

4.

“A mix of local and expat teachers work here. Some teachers don’t speak any English, but everyone is friendly. I don’t think it is LGBT friendly as an induction meeting for new teachers gives a friendly warning about keeping your sexuality to yourself…” – Colegio Interamericano de Guatemala (137 total comments)

    5.

    “Most of the staff if expat, including the non-teaching employees (bus drivers, kitchen staff, etc.). On average, I would say staff stay here for 3-5 years. The school is LGBT friendly as is Switzerland…” – Leysin American School (124 total comments)

    6.

    “Teachers are from various countries, but mainly from the UK, Ireland, the US, Canada and Spain, but we do have teachers hired from Hungary and Greece. Some teachers are local hires, but the majority aren’t. Teaching Assistants are all local hires. There is no native English speaker requirement as far as I know. The country is definitely not LGBT friendly as it is a strict Islamic country…” – SEK International School Qatar (43 total comments)

      7.

      “LGBT friendly school. A mixture of couples and singles. Local and expat teachers. There has been a turnover of teachers in the last few years, with Burkina not being as stable as it was and unrest here and in neighbouring countries.” – International School of Ouagadougou (57 total comments)

      8.

      “Except for ATs, Bahasa and Mandarin teachers – ALL teachers are expats. Almost all are from the UK. There are also Canadian, American, and Australian – but in a small minority. There are a few non-native speakers also – from France, Spain, for example… The staffroom is not that diverse, though. The country itself is not that LGBT friendly. Many LGBT teachers have fared well, others have left, describing the dating scene as poor…” – The British International School of Kuala Lumpur (34 total comments)

        9.

        “The majority of the teachers here are from the US, Aus/NZ and the UK. There are also a fair number of ‘local’ teachers who, by and large, did their teacher training in the US. Teaching assistants are locally hired, and the school runs an internship for locally trained teachers. The school and country is LGBT friendly. The staff turnover rate is fairly typical for an international school. The vast majority of staff hold Master’s degrees (for which there is additional pay on the payscale), and the clear preference is for an education degree…” – American School Antananarivo (24 total comments)

        10.

        “Every class must have a native English speaker who works alongside a local bilingual coeducator. The school is brand new, so it is difficult to state staff turnover – those hired since the beginning still work there. A very inclusive and LGBT friendly school…” – GIS – The International School of Sao Paulo (22 total comments)

          11.

          “Almost all of the classroom teachers are foreigners from Canada, the US, Australia, New Zealand, and England. The teaching assistants and most of the staff are Russian. Please note that there is almost zero diversity at this school. This is not an LGBT-friendly country or school. Please do not disclose if you are LGBT for your own sake…” – International School of Kazan (164 total comments)

          12.

          “High turnover of local staff. Local pay is <10% of foreign teacher’s salary.
          Foreign teachers stay for 3 years typically. It is a LGBT friendly school, but the country is still evolving, and most LGBT teachers are not open about being gay.” – Escuela Bella Vista Maracaibo (65 total comments)

            Check out the rest of the “LGBT friendly” submitted comments on our website here (there are 99 of them!).

            If you have worked at an international school and have first-hand knowledge about whether the international school or the host country is LGBT-friendly, log in to International School Community and submit your comment. For every 10 submitted comments, you will get one month of free premium membership added to your account!

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