Gender Identity & Expression Training, Page 2 Reviews
We ask our users to rate and review our Gender Identity & Expression Training course immediately after they've completed their training. Here's what people are saying...
Average score 4.5
247 reviews
Encouraging to see this course, informative content and well presented.
No summary provided
It helped me to make clear the new neutral pronouns.
Negative questions are unnecessarily confusing. Also is the exact number of years a third gender has existed in India as important as the other issues raised?
There are areas that people get uncomfortable and anxious with this subject and there is no need. Understanding mistakes people make and the recovery is paramount to putting people at ease here. I feel that people till very recently have kept themselves distanced from all aspects of this subject through fear of making 'costly' mistakes.
For such a sensitive and contested subject the course presented a very simplistic view. It's definitely an area where training would be useful but the course simply presented a preferred way of seeing the world. For example: - The course made it very clear that sex and gender are different. However, it then said that "if a person identifies as a male and he refers to himself as masculine, then his gender identity is male regardless of his anatomy". It would have been very useful here to cover whether male / female are terms describing sex or gender; if they do both as it appears from the statement then how should we distinguish between sex and gender? - When discussing transitioning it stated that one indication would be someone using a preferred gender space where they feel most comfortable. Many people feel uncomfortable with someone of the opposite sex sharing a single sex space (regardless of their views of gender). It would be really useful for the training to look at how to manage perceptions of single 'gender spaces' vs single 'sex spaces', but it ignored these questions. The training usefully told us to be kind and to apologise when causing offence. Ideally we wouldn't need training for that, or it could be included in the wider DEI or anti-bullying training. Ultimately it presented some contested views as fact and described any other opinions as 'outdated'.
Really good training, explaining gender in a very inclusive and comprehensive way.
I learned a few new things and the course was useful. The question about Indian history was a little unfair and off the subject however!
No summary provided
This training opened my eyes to terminology and language which may be appropriate or inappropriate.