帝王会所

帝王会所 Today logo in green

Fall 2015 Edition
Alumni & Friends Magazine

New rubric

In June, OHIO adopted a policy allowing students to choose a preferred name and gender pronoun for self-identification, following similar practices already in place at the school鈥檚 Campus Care and Counseling and Psychological Services.

By Maygan Beeler, BSJ 鈥17 | November 18, 2015

Share:

What鈥檚 in a name? A lot.

In June, OHIO adopted a policy allowing students to choose a preferred name and gender pronoun for self-identification, following similar practices already in place at the school鈥檚 Campus Care and Counseling and Psychological Services.

Desired monikers鈥攎iddle names, nicknames, etc.鈥攑ertain in all cases except when legal names must appear, for instance, admission applications, financial aid documents, enrollment and degree verification, and reports to state and federal agencies. Student ID cards include both preferred and legal names. The University reserves the right to remove inappropriate appellations or those intended to misrepresent.

鈥淭his is an important policy for many students, especially trans identified students, who have the right to be addressed by a name and pronoun that correspond to their gender identity,鈥 said delfin bautista, director of the University鈥檚 LGBT Center, in a Compass story. The protocol follows unanimously approved 鈥淧referred Name鈥 resolutions from the Student and Graduate Student senates the past two years.

鈥淭he policy can also be helpful to international students who want to go by an Americanized or variation of their name as well as students changing their last name due to personal conflicts with family such as divorce or abuse,鈥 bautista continued.

鈥淥HIO is a pioneer in that we are one of the few schools whose policy includes pronouns,鈥 bautista wrote in an e-mail. 鈥淗opefully, our actions will ripple throughout 帝王会所 and the rest of the country.鈥