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LGBTQ Plus

Rare Poll Finds LGBT Students Fear School Because Of Bullies

At a Pride Parade in Bogota, Colombia
At a Pride Parade in Bogota, Colombia

-Analysis-

BOGOTÁ — A majority of gay and lesbian students in Colombia feel unsafe in school and almost a quarter of them miss classes because they fear getting bullied, a survey by two non-profits found. Sixty-seven percent of LGBT secondary schoolchildren feel unsafe at school, according to the poll by advocacy groups Colombia Diversa and Sentiido, which surveyed 500 students.

A 14-year-old bisexual student said she had not yet come out as her school would "open a disciplinary folder and force her to see a psychologist." An 18-year-old said he was relieved to have finished secondary school. He said he was tired of hearing one teacher repeat that gay men would "end up with a ripped sphincter," research by the study found.

Juliana Martínez, a member of Sentiido and a lecturer at the American University, told El Espectador that there are no figures on bullying of LGBT students at Colombian schools. "We're practically guessing ... (as) it is often not recognized as violence," she said.

The poll found that 59% of victims prefer to not speak up about the intimidation they face. This is not surprising. Many schools and parents blame the LGBT student, not the bully. Constitutional rights and the education ministry's rules are rarely enforced in schools. Sergio Urrego, a gay student who committed suicide in August 2014 after relentless bullying, has finally made Colombians wake up to the toxic environment in schools.

The study offered solutions to reduce bullying of LGBT students at school such as monitoring the language students use in classrooms. It's impossible ... to build a country at peace, when our educational institutions are favorable settings for war and violence," the survey noted.

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Society

Why AI Won't Kill The Beauty Or Benefits Of Learning A Foreign Language

As technology advances, machine translation threatens to replace the art of learning languages. Will we lose the cultural richness and personal growth that comes from mastering a foreign tongue?

photo of people in a circle holding hands

A school in Lagos, Nigeria

Sally Hayden/SOPA Images via ZUMA
Anna Franchin

ROME — "Wo zui xihuan de shiwu shi shousi, my favorite food is sushi..."

In a recent video, U.S.-based journalist Louise Matsakis can be seen and heard expressing herself in perfect Mandarin. Having only been studying Chinese for a few years, Matsakis is still far from fluent. But in the video, she pronounces every syllable flawlessly and in the right tone, without errors or awkward pauses, just as a native speaker would. The voice was soft but also "slightly alien," she herself acknowledges in an article last month in The Atlantic.

Matsakis had used the HeyGen software, a Los Angeles startup that makes it possible to create deepfake videos, that is, to use artificial intelligence to make real people say almost anything. All it takes is to upload a picture of one's face and some text, which is then matched with an artificial voice and can be translated into more than 40 languages. Matsakis writes that the tool works so well she wonders if all her efforts at learning Mandarin were a waste.

Automatic translation was not always so convincing. The early tools (Google Translate is from 2006) were rather poor, only able to give a general idea of, for instance, of a French or Portuguese website. In 2010, in the Netherlands, a subpoena translated from Dutch to Russian using Translate instructed a defendant not to show up in court when he should have gone. The big leap forward came in 2015, when Baidu (China's leading search engine) put its large-scale neural machine translation service into operation. In just a few years, neural networks, the machine learning systems behind programs like ChatGPT, have improved the quality of machine-made translation, making it significantly more reliable.

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Such progress, however, is accompanied in some countries by another phenomenon: a collapse in the number of students taking up foreign languages. In Australia in 2021 only 8.6% of high school seniors had chosen to learn another language, a record low. In South Korea and New Zealand, universities are closing French, German and Italian departments. At U.S. colleges between 2009 and 2021, enrollment in non-English language courses declined by 29.3%, while it had grown steadily in the previous 30 years.

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