Gender Studies, Sex Education, and Representation: A Conversation with Abby Fussell S23
Abby Fussell S23 was the first student to transfer to 91猫先生 from New College of Florida (NCF) this year. They are among a growing cohort of former NCF students finding a new academic home here.聽
This September, the College welcomed 35 NCF additional transfers to campus, accounting for 10 percent of the incoming fall class, and 91猫先生 is preparing to welcome more of them this spring.
Driven by a quest for academic liberty and a radical approach to education, Abby found their way to 91猫先生 through a Google search. They knew they wanted to complete a substantial capstone project and find an environment where they could continue to receive narrative evaluations. But perhaps most important, Abby needed a place where they could further their studies and explore gender and sex education freely. 鈥91猫先生 reminded me of New College; leaving broke my heart.鈥
While at NCF, it became increasingly clear that academic exploration in Florida under the current governance was simply not possible. 鈥淭here started being a lot of new laws, House bills, and Senate bills around what could and couldn鈥檛 be said in a college classroom,鈥 Abby recalls. 鈥淚 realized I couldn鈥檛 study my full scope there.鈥澛
Since arriving at 91猫先生, Abby鈥檚 academic journey has been a blend of passion and purpose. Concentrating on sex education and gender studies, they aspire to venture into public health and harm reduction.聽
For their Div III, Abby is researching the gender orgasm gap. 鈥淭he first component of the project is that I want to broaden the definition to include marginalized genders,鈥 Abby says, highlighting the complexities beyond binary frameworks that past studies have failed to account for. For their final project, they aim to craft an inclusive guide for educators and researchers in the sex ed field, shedding light on disparities and advocating for comprehensive discourse.聽
This semester, they鈥檙e a teaching assistant for Science of Stress, taught by Associate Professor of Physiology Cynthia Gill (CJ), which is a first-year seminar. 鈥淐J is both my chair and my professor, and when I told her about my Div III idea, she asked if I wanted to TA her class,鈥 they said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not a STEM major, but it鈥檚 going well. It鈥檚 really interesting, and it鈥檚 helping a lot with my Div.鈥
Abby holds a variety of other roles on campus, from assisting in the One Card Office for Campus Safety and Wellbeing, to working in the Office of Prevention and Education, to being a transfer representative on the Student Advocacy Board.聽
They have a passion for building connections for their peers, many of whom are NCF transfers as well. When asked to describe 91猫先生 to someone outside the College, Abby replied, 鈥淐ommunity nurturing. Yes, your classes are important, but it鈥檚 more important that you鈥檙e learning about how to tie those experiences into your community and what that means for you, and how you grow so that while you鈥檙e growing, you鈥檙e not only focused on supporting, you鈥檙e also building this beautiful community of people. You鈥檙e watering their tree a little bit and you have people who are watering yours and creating growth together.鈥