National Association of GSA Networks

The National Association of GSA Networks is a nationwide federation of state-level gay-straight alliance networks. It was created in 2005 through Gay-Straight Alliance Network (GSA Network), a California non-profit organization that organizes gay-straight alliances in public and private schools in the state.

Member GSA networks

  • Center for Artistic Revolution (Arkansas)
  • Alabama Safe Schools Coalition c/o Equality Alabama
  • Wingspan (Arizona)
  • GSA Network
  • Colorado Gay-Straight Alliance Network and One Colorado
  • True Colors (Connecticut)
  • Florida Gay Straight Alliance Network c/o Equality Florida
  • Georgia Safe Schools Coalition
  • Supporting and Mentoring Youth Advocates and Leaders (SMYAL) (District of Columbia)
  • Illinois GSA Network and Illinois Safe Schools Alliance
  • Indiana Youth Group
  • Iowa Pride Network
  • Louisville Youth Group (Kentucky)
  • GLSEN Southern Maine
  • Massachusetts GSA Network c/o Massachusetts Commission on GLBT Youth
  • Out For Good (Minnesota)
  • Mississippi Safe Schools Coalition
  • Missouri GSA Network (Missouri)
  • HiTOPS (New Jersey)
  • New Mexico GSA Network
  • Long Island Gay and Lesbian Youth (New York)
  • LGBT Center of Raleigh (North Carolina)
  • Kaleidoscope Youth Center (Ohio)
  • Oregon Safe Schools and Communities Coalition and Oregon Gay Straight Alliance Network
  • Ally Safe Schools and Mazzoni Center (Pennsylvania)
  • Youth Pride Rhode Island
  • SC Equality (South Carolina)
  • Eastern Tennessee GLSEN Chapter (Tennessee)
  • Texas GSA Network
  • Utah QSA Network
  • Outright Vermont
  • GLSEN Richmond (Virginia)
  • Washington GSA Network and GLSEN Washington Chapter
  • GSA For Safe Schools (Wisconsin)

Initiatives

Gay-Straight Alliance Network holds both a GSA Advocacy & Youth Leadership Academy (GAYLA) and Queer Youth Advocacy Day (QYAD) each year.

The National Association holds an annual National Gathering for GSAs and Safe school coalitions.

Website

gollark: Probably true.
gollark: It does seem to have a vaguely similar auto-parallel thing, so meh.
gollark: There's this really nice crate called `rayon` where you can use normal iterator stuff as usual but it parallelizes it for you.
gollark: I would probably use supreme Rust™™ for parallel stuff, but I guess C works too if you avoid race conditions and stuff.
gollark: Also, Python has the GIL, so CPU-bound tasks will not be very thread-able.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.