LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Counting LGBT+ Communities
1.2. Population-Based SOGI Data Collection with Youth
1.3. Growing up in Ireland (GUI)
1.4. Irish LGBTI+ National Youth Strategy and Youth Advisory Group (YAG)
- 15(d) Review… appropriate language and ways to ask about gender identity and sexual orientation… to inform the development of best practice instrumentation… for inclusion in surveys and/or Census.
- 15(g) Explore Growing Up in Ireland Wave 3 data that captures sexual orientation and other relevant information [52] (pp. 30–31).
1.5. Participation as a Form of Social Justice
1.6. Rationale
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Aim and Objectives
2.2. Researcher Characteristics and Reflexivity
2.3. Access, Recruitment and Sampling
2.4. Ethical Considerations
2.5. Data Collection
2.6. Data Management and Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Context, Documenting Change over Time and Usefulness of Data
3.2. Survey Design
Realigning GUI Questions
3.3. Survey Questions
3.3.1. Sexual Orientation Questionnaire Items
3.3.2. Gender and Gender Identity Questionnaire Items
3.4. “Learning with” Young People
3.5. Summary
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
No. | Topic | Item | Manuscript Page No. |
---|---|---|---|
Title and abstract | |||
S1 | Title | Concise description of the nature and topic of the study identifying the study as qualitative or indicating the approach (e.g., ethnography, grounded theory) or data collection methods (e.g., interview, focus group) is recommended | 1 |
S2 | Abstract | Summary of key elements of the study using the abstract format of the intended publication; typically includes objective, methods, results, and conclusions | 1 |
Introduction | |||
S3 | Problem formulation | Description and significance of the problem/phenomenon studied; review of relevant theory and empirical work; problem statement | 2–5 |
S4 | Purpose or research question | Purpose of the study and specific objectives or questions | 6 |
Methods | |||
S5 | Qualitative approach and research paradigm | Qualitative approach (e.g., ethnography, grounded theory, case study, phenomenology, narrative research) and guiding theory if appropriate; identifying the research paradigm (e.g., positivist, constructivist/interpretivist) is also recommended | 7 |
S6 | Researcher characteristics and reflexivity | Researchers’ characteristics that may influence the research, including personal attributes, qualifications/experience, relationship with participants, assumptions, or presuppositions; potential or actual interaction between researchers’ characteristics and the research questions, approach, methods, results, or transferability | 7. |
S7 | Context | Setting/site and salient contextual factors; rationale | 5–6 |
S8 | Sampling strategy | How and why research participants, documents, or events were selected; criteria for deciding when no further sampling was necessary (e.g., sampling saturation); rationale | 8 |
S9 | Ethical issues pertaining to human subjects | Documentation of approval by an appropriate ethics review board and participant consent, or explanation for lack thereof; other confidentiality and data security issues | 9 |
S10 | Data collection methods | Types of data collected; details of data collection procedures including (as appropriate) start and stop dates of data collection and analysis, iterative process, triangulation of sources/methods, and modification of procedures in response to evolving study findings; rationale | 9 |
S11 | Data collection instruments and technologies | Description of instruments (e.g., interview guides, questionnaires) and devices (e.g., audio recorders) used for data collection; if/how the instrument(s) changed over the course of the study | 9 |
S12 | Units of study | Number and relevant characteristics of participants, documents, or events included in the study; level of participation (could be reported in results) | 8 |
S13 | Data processing | Methods for processing data prior to and during analysis, including transcription, data entry, data management and security, verification of data integrity, data coding, and anonymization / deidentification of excerpts | 9–10 |
S14 | Data analysis | Process by which inferences, themes, etc., were identified and developed, including researchers involved in data analysis; usually references a specific paradigm or approach; rationale | 9–10 |
S15 | Techniques to enhance trustworthiness | Techniques to enhance trustworthiness and credibility of data analysis (e.g., member checking, audit trail, triangulation); rationale | 10 |
Results/Findings | |||
S16 | Synthesis and interpretation | Main findings (e.g., interpretations, inferences, and themes); might include development of a theory or model, or integration with prior research or theory | 9–21 |
S17 | Links to empirical data | Evidence (e.g., quotes, field notes, text excerpts, photographs) to substantiate analytic findings | 9–21 |
Discussion | |||
S18 | Integration with prior work, implications, transferability, and contribution(s) to the field | Short summary of main findings; explanation of how findings and conclusions connect to, support, elaborate on, or challenge conclusions of earlier scholarship; discussion of scope of application/generalizability; identification of unique contribution(s) to scholarship in a discipline or field | 9–21 |
S19 | Limitations | Trustworthiness and limitations of findings | 18–21 |
Other | |||
S20 | Conflicts of interest | Potential sources of influence or perceived influence on study conduct and conclusions; how these were managed | 25 |
S21 | Funding | Sources of funding and other support; role of funders in data collection, interpretation, and reporting | 24 |
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Characteristic | Number of PPI Panel Members |
---|---|
Grew Up in Ireland | yes (n = 6) rural (n = 3), urban (n = 3) |
Sexual orientation | lesbian (n = 3) gay (n = 3) queer (n = 1) pansexual (n = 1) * |
Gender | male (n = 3); female (n = 3) |
Gender identity | transgender (n = 1); cisgender (n = 5); |
Pronouns | she/her (n = 3); he/him (n = 3); they/them (n = 1) * |
Age at the time of the marriage equality referendum | 15 years (n = 3); 17 years (n = 2); 22 years (n = 1) |
Age at time of legal gender recognition by self-identification for adults | 15 years (n = 2); 16 years (n = 1); 17 years (n = 2); 22 years (n = 1) |
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) study:
| yes (n = 6) no (n = 6) no (n = 6) 16 years (n = 2); 17 years (n = 1); 18 years (n = 2); 23 years (n = 1) |
Age at time of initiation of LGBTI+ National Youth Strategy | 16 years (n = 2); 17 years (n = 1); 18 years (n = 2); 23 years (n = 1) |
Social Context | Quotations to Illustrate PPI Panel Members’ Perspectives and Priorities |
---|---|
Survey Context | |
Social acceptance | “Really good timing that the Growing Up in Ireland has respondents born after decriminalization and who came of age at a time of marriage equality.So, it’s an interesting time that this data covers”. |
“Identity ebbs and flows and changes all the time. These young people could be in their 70s and be asked the same question and give a different answer, when the Growing Up in Ireland survey turns into the Growing Old in Ireland survey”. | |
“As societal acceptance increases and things continue to change, it will be interesting to see how that data changes with this wider change, because it’s longitudinal… Or that with the impact of living in a rural community, we don’t see those changes.” | |
Valuable data | “They are official and without them people are not represented. So, it is very important to have data.It’s so hard to get that information. I would always be excited about this”. |
“It is very powerful for people – in terms of justifying and explaining their experiences and verifying the needs of the community—people who will give funding, who will give rights; people who have the power to do things that will improve these experiences”. | |
“A project like this that’s longitudinal and representative is the gold standard for people to use. Especially for LGBT+ young people about what the world is like at this age, and across different points in time.” |
Survey Design | Quotations to Illustrate PPI Panel Members’ Perspectives and Priorities |
---|---|
Realigning GUI Questions | |
Survey title | “So, they’ve put down gender and sexuality as a sensitive topic.I wouldn’t see it as being a ‘sensitive’ topic.It gives a different sort of message to the young person, to the researchers, to the parents as well, if it’s ‘sensitive’ |
It is far safer to say ‘supplementary’ because if it’s ‘sensitive’ there are connotations of additional needed privacy. If it’s ‘supplementary’ it’s just extra questions”. | |
Demographic data | “I can’t quite fathom why that’s so separate from general demographic info. I would always put questions like this in a demographic section. My instinct is that’s where they should go. The information is functionally about demographics—in terms of asking if somebody is LGBT+, it’s a demographic question”. |
“It seems out of place, if that makes sense. I nearly think that Section D was to try to find somewhere to put the sexual orientation and gender identity questions in. So yeah, definitely that question order should be re-jigged”. | |
The questions about talking openly about sex could easily go into the sex education section. Then you put the questions about boyfriends and girlfriends into the relationship section. It basically leaves the sexual orientation and gender identity questions sitting on their own—and theyshould just be demographic—sothey wouldn’t need a Section D”. | |
Separating data collection of sex and gender | “One of the things that strikes me that at the beginning of the questionnaire they ask sex with two options: male/female. Then later on in Section D they ask a gender question with options: male/female/other/prefer not to say—when they’ve already asked about the young person’s sex”. |
“Otherwise, it becomes, ‘Don’t you believe me, or did I give you the wrong answer?’ Especially because they didn’t give the option earlier for people to express themselves”. | |
“Were they expecting a trans person to put down their assigned gender in response to male/female? And then a few questions later put down their gender identity and whether they were trans? It can’t just be ‘what is your sex?” | |
Discussing sex with parents | “That’s the order with this question? ‘Do you find it hard to talk about sex with your parents and are you gay?’ One of the biggest worries that young LGBT+ people first have is ‘What will my parents think?’”. |
“I think it would have an impact on how people might answer. It might be very difficult to answer the sexual orientation question. If someone thinks ‘I can’t talk to my father about sex, let alone sexuality and gender, I can’t be out, I’m just going to put something else’.” | |
“They don’t ask whether you can talk openly about sexual orientation or gender identity with your parents, it’s specifically about talking openly about sexual intercourse.They have a question on sex education, so those questions would be much better placed in that section, because the primary educator is a parent”. |
Survey Questions | Quotations to Illustrate PPI Panel Members’ Perspectives and Priorities |
---|---|
Question Phrasing: Sexual Orientation | |
Measuring sexual orientation | “Just thinking about identity vs attraction. I know someone who tends to identify as gay, even though attraction-wise they often find themselves attracted to multiple genders… more in line with pansexuality”. |
“They’ve got questions that captured identity, despite descriptions of attraction.I think pretty much for my age group, if they asked: ‘How would you describe your sexual orientation?’ without having the attraction in there, that could work”. | |
“So, you’re talking about young people who’ve all grown up with marriage equality as a reference point. It probably did mean that those young people could understand the terms.Even if you’re someone who doesn’t understand ‘heterosexual’—I’m sure my age group would know ‘straight’”. | |
“I don’t like that ‘heterosexual’ is first and gay is second, because, again it’s arbitrary, clearly, but it’s also not and implies a hierarchy. I am very taken aback by the fact that they have used heterosexual / straight… There’s clearly a difference”. | |
Descriptors of attraction | “I’m wondering why does heterosexual/straight have ‘sexually attracted to the opposite sex’, but the rest just have attracted?” That’s a bit leading, it’s like: “So I have to be straight to be sexually attracted, whereas if I’m gay or lesbian, it’s just attracted. |
[Reading responses] heterosexual: sexually attracted to the opposite sex; gay or lesbian: attracted to the same sex. Well, that’s a really good point. It’s definitely an oversight.I would highly doubt that was something that was purposely done”. | |
I suppose the asexual part, being a spectrum, to just ask about attraction, is not quite right. I’m pretty sure that there are asexual people that are attracted to people, that are in relationships. I just think the part in brackets ‘not attracted to either sex’, that may not be accurate”. | |
Inclusion of pansexual | “I think pansexual should be included. I mean if we’re really being inclusive. I have heard people saying: ‘Well I’m not bisexual, I’m pansexual,’ or vice versa”. |
“I might have put it as bisexual/pansexual because there are so many people who see a relatively wavy dotted line between them in their own experience. But I don’t think it would be a bad thing for it to be included separately either.” “With the question about sexual orientation, the bisexual part would assume two genders, so maybe the introduction of pansexual within the survey needs to be added. Even if people are like: ‘Does that mean you’re attracted to pans, ha ha“. | |
Inclusion of queer | “ I don’t know how much of a risk it would be putting in queer. I wouldn’t want someone to be confronted in the middle of a survey, when it’s not necessary”. |
“I love it. It’s a very valuable term that a lot of people really love and love to use and there are a proportion of people who are upset by it.” | |
“I have a very awkward relationship with the term ‘queer’. I didn’t see anything positive about it. Now, living as an adult in Dublin, it doesn’t have those connotations. I love the principle of it, I love that it includes everyone”. | |
“My perspective used to be ‘Well, I’m reclaiming the word, it’s my identity, it’s who I am and I’m entitled to use it’. So queer is an identity that I use, but I wouldn’t impose it. You won’t really find anyone who has a neutral reaction to the word queer—you either find it empowering, or it’s upsetting. There is no in-between”. | |
“Because that word was used against people growing up, as a slur, not everyone’s comfortable with it. My Dublin-based friends would have no problem; my rural friends would have a much harsher view on the word ‘queer’” | |
Question phrasing: gender identity | |
Gender “other” as a response category | “There’s no way to capture what ‘other’ is, because like sexuality, gender is a spectrum. So, by just having binary terms and then ‘other’ it doesn’t allow people to put down what their gender is. It could be that someone is gender fluid, and they don’t identify with gender ‘other’. Maybe gender ‘other’ is assumed to be non-binary, so then that option isn’t there for them to self-identify”. |
“We’re not at a stage yet in Irish society where someone would like casually say ‘gender other’. It’s a lot more normalized to have fluidity in sexuality than it would be in gender. I don’t know whether, in this circumstance, that could be very offensive or feel like erasure to categorise a number of identities under ‘other,’ which is kind of problematic”. | |
“It’s hard to probe into what people mean when they say ‘gender other’ because everybody who’s non-binary, they don’t all just say ‘non binary’—there’s a lot of more specific non-binary identity labels that they may use—agender or gender fluid or gender queer are ones that are more common”. | |
Transgender identification | “Having a separate question about whether or not somebody is trans is the best option. So often, the alternative is just putting trans in the list of sexualities”. When there’s a list of gender options and it’s male / female / trans male / trans female—that’s not good”. |
“I will say points for the ‘Would you describe yourself as transgender’?” |
“Learning with” Young People | Quotations to Illustrate PPI Panel Members’ Perspectives and Priorities |
---|---|
Enhancing Data Quality | |
Input into research teams | “I think it’s really good that Growing Up in Ireland are asking about this, because it’s all this language that is really binary, and things are much more beyond the binary”. |
“It is so important to have input into the research teams, to have that kind of objectiveness and have representation from different communities”. | |
“I’m glad they’re thinking about how to ask these questions. It’s great that it has been identified as an important thing to look at when designing these surveys”. | |
Understanding of SOGI questions by the majority youth population | “Young people generally know what their sexuality is…So, to not understand the question would be unlikely. Most people will read a question asking them their gender and they will know the answer.People do not know they have a gender identity and will say: ‘Yeah, I don’t have a gender identity, yet’. Yes, yes you do.They also have no idea if they are trans or not”. |
“So, everybody has different understandings of a question. Even if it’s clear to the person coming up with the question, it’s not always clear to the people answering the question, you know. We have to make sure everyone is included. It’s just that there are people who don’t know what some of the questions mean”. | |
Inclusion through free-text options | “In an ideal world we would use open-ended questions. It’s great for people answering the questions to feel like they’re being validated. But, you can’t label what someone is saying, you can’t assign them that identity”. |
“I mean it would probably be great to have an open-ended, qualitative answer box, you know. If we don’t have language, I mean documented language, on all the varied and intricate gender identities, maybe it might be a nice opportunity to say ‘Can you please name your gender identity?’” | |
“When it comes down to actually crunching figures and using the data, open ended questions are very unhelpful.When it comes to putting that data to use, it’s not as helpful, and I think that that should be the priority. But we need to find a good balance.” | |
“If you’re writing in a response, there’s no visibility. If they’re not out to themselves, you’re still creating some kind of visibility for them, for the first time ever, for the first time in a while, or for potentially what they could maybe tick in the future. To have visibility they can see all these options. I think that’s a positive thing”. | |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ceatha, N.; Koay, A.C.C.; Kelly, A.; Killeen, T.; McCabe, K.; Murray, J.; Pope, J.; Scully, N.; Buggy, C.; Crowley, D. LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study. Youth 2023, 3, 261-284. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3010018
Ceatha N, Koay ACC, Kelly A, Killeen T, McCabe K, Murray J, Pope J, Scully N, Buggy C, Crowley D. LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study. Youth. 2023; 3(1):261-284. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3010018
Chicago/Turabian StyleCeatha, Nerilee, Aaron C. C. Koay, Ayrton Kelly, Tara Killeen, Katie McCabe, James Murray, Jayson Pope, Niamh Scully, Conor Buggy, and Des Crowley. 2023. "LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study" Youth 3, no. 1: 261-284. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3010018
APA StyleCeatha, N., Koay, A. C. C., Kelly, A., Killeen, T., McCabe, K., Murray, J., Pope, J., Scully, N., Buggy, C., & Crowley, D. (2023). LGBT+ Youth Perspectives on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions in the Growing Up in Ireland Survey: A Qualitative Study. Youth, 3(1), 261-284. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3010018