Stability and Change in Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation Across Childhood and Adolescence

Volume 90, Issue 1-3, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development

Benjamin E. deMayo, Natalie M. Gallagher, Rachel A. Leshin, and Kristina R. Olson

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Abstract

Identity trajectories among LGBTQ+ youth are frequently invoked in high-stakes court cases and political discourse despite a lack of empirical evidence. We present the most comprehensive longitudinal description to date of gender identity and sexual orientation in North American youth who underwent a social gender transition by age 12 (N = 317); we also present gender and sexual orientation outcomes among their siblings (N = 218) and an unrelated comparison sample (N = 377) who were cisgender at recruitment. On average, youth were 8 years old at recruitment and 14 at their most recent report. Stability in gender identity was the most common trajectory (over 80% in all three groups showed stability), and youth who were cisgender at recruitment showed no more or less gender stability than early-identifying transgender youth. Between 6 and 12 percent of youth in each group are currently nonbinary. Among early-identifying transgender youths, 3.8% are currently cisgender, mirroring the percentage of youth in the initially cisgender groups who are currently binary transgender (3.7%). Queer sexual orientation was high among both binary transgender (60%) and cisgender (33%) adolescents, who did not differ in levels of sexual orientation change over time (38.5% across groups). Current sexual orientation, and to a lesser extent gender, was related to gender-typed preferences and gender self-identification on a continuous spectrum earlier in development. We discuss how these results inform broader discussions about a potential generational shift in gender identity and sexual orientation among youth in the U.S. and Canada. 

About the Authors


Commentaries


Videos


Uniqueness and Timeliness of the Trans Youth Project

A conversation about the Trans Youth Project. Why is this study so unique and timely? SRCD Monograph author Rachel A. Leshin discusses this question.

Research Methodology and Key Findings from this Monograph

A conversation about the methodology and key findings from this Monograph. SRCD Monograph authors Rachel A. Leshin and Benjamin E. deMayo discuss this topic.

Research Methodology and Key Findings from this Monograph

A conversation about what the public should understand about transgender and LGBTQ+ youth based on this longitudinal research. SRCD Monograph author Benjamin E. deMayo discusses this topic.

Teaching and Research Resources