University of Northern Iowa Professor Dr. Nicholas Pace has published The Principal’s Challenge Learning from Gay and Lesbian Students. The book draws from interviews with Iowa's Matthew Shepard Scholarship recipients.

The Principal's Challenge Learning from Gay and Lesbian StudentsThis unique book presents lessons a straight principal-turned-professor has learned through personal experience and research with gay and lesbian high school students. It begins with a young principal acknowledging that he, nor his administrative education program, had given any thought to issues surrounding students’ sexual orientation. However, when a senior in his tiny rural high school came out, the principal started down an unexpected path that would change his outlook on school leadership—and transform his practice.

Presented in eight unique stories in students’ own words, we experience their challenges, fears, and triumphs—and see how their schools and the people in them both helped and hurt. Through their poignant, honest, familiar, and often surprising stories, we see how these eight students navigate what Unks (2003, p. 323) calls “the most homophobic institutions in American society.”

Their stories also reveal an unexpected, yet vital lesson for educators, policy makers, and all those concerned with meeting students’ needs—that being gay or lesbian in high school does not automatically lead to bad outcomes. The students’ firsthand accounts, along with lessons learned by the once apprehensive principal, show that there is a much more positive, optimistic, and seldom-told story.

The book challenges practicing and aspiring school leaders to:

  • Move beyond what we think we know about gay and lesbian students and see them as unique people with strengths and struggles, gifts and challenges.
  • Examine the unique context of their schools and see how one size solution doesn’t fit all.
  • Understand agency, agendas, and how gay-straight alliances can benefit all students.
  • Summon the courage to transform our mission statements from slogans and live them everyday.

The Principal’s Challenge Learning from Gay and Lesbian Students is available online from Information Age Publishing.

The Eychaner Foundation is proud to sponsor The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later, a production of Stagewest and the Des Moines Playhouse.

In June 2008, members of Tectonic Theater Project returned to Laramie, Wyoming to explore how the town had changed in the ten years since Matthew Shepard's murder. What they found defied their expectations. The result is a new play about how we construct our own history. This is the continuing story of an American Town.

Tickets are Free. Now available in person at the Des Moines Playhouse ticket office. Limit of four per person. You must arrive by 6:45 PM on October 12 to guarantee a seat. General admission seating. Donations will be accepted for Iowa's Matthew Shepard Scholarship Program.

Iowa's 2009 Matthew Shepard Scholars

Eleven scholarships totaling up to $255,000 will be presented to openly lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender high school students at the sixth annual Matthew Shepard Scholarship Awards Dinner, Friday, June 5, 2009, at 7:45 p.m. at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines (Reception begins at 5:30 PM, Dinner at 6:45 PM, Program at 7:45 PM).

Six Iowa high school graduates, Charles Banta of Calamus, Chloe Coulter of Johnston, Ryan Mickey of Council Bluffs, Thao Pham of Urbandale, Karla Quandt of Carroll and Steven Swim of West Des Moines will receive Gold Matthew Shepard Scholarships worth approximately $35,000 each. Five others, Kyle Bennett of Carroll, Chris Celania of Ottumwa, Ryan Jamieson of Denver, Shelby Long of Marshalltown and Kyle Woollums of Bettendorf will receive Silver Matthew Shepard Scholarships worth up to $9,000 each.

Judy Shepard will headline the Awards Dinner. Shepard lost her 21 year-old son, Matthew, to a murder motivated by anti-gay hate. Matthew’s death moved many thousands of people around the world to attend vigils and rallies in his memory. Determined to prevent others from suffering their son’s fate, Judy and Dennis decided to turn their grief into action and established the Matthew Shepard Foundation to carry on Matthew’s legacy.

CEO of Garden State Equality (New Jersey) Steven Goldstein will present the keynote address. Steven and his partner Daniel Gross were the first couple to have their union covered by the New York Times. Steven has owned a public affairs consulting firm in New York and was co-manager of Jon Corzine's successful 2000 campaign for the US Senate from New Jersey. Spokesman Mike Pace will emcee the evening and members of the Des Moines Gay Men’s Chorus will present a special musical performance.

Attorneys Sharon Malheiro and Camilla Taylor will he honored for their successful efforts establishing marriage equality in Iowa. Sharon was co-counsel in defending Judge Jeffrey Neary in the Alons v. Iowa District Court for Woodbury County civil union dissolution case, an expert witness in Varnum v. Brien marriage equality case, and was instrumental in encouraging Lambda Legal to successfully lead both cases, which resulted in victorious Iowa Supreme Court decisions. Camilla is Senior Staff Attorney in the Midwest Regional Office of Lambda Legal, and led Lambda Legal’s successful effort in litigating Varnum v. Brien in District Court and before the Iowa Supreme Court.

The Matthew Shepard Scholarship is named in memory of Matthew Shepard. The Scholarship honors openly gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Iowa high school students who work to promote tolerance and non-discrimination in their schools and communities.

The Matthew Shepard Scholarship Awards Dinner is open to the press, and interviews with scholarship recipients may be scheduled by calling 515/473-0002 or 515/262-0000. Scholar photos and profiles are available online at eychanerfoundation.org.

Attorneys Sharon Malheiro and Camilla Taylor will be honored at the 2009 Matthew Shepard Scholarship Awards Dinner on June 5, 2009. Sharon Malheiro was co-counsel in defending Judge Jeffrey Neary in the Alons v. Iowa District Court for Woodbury County civil union dissolution case, an expert witness in Varnum v. Brien marriage equality case, and was instrumental in encouraging Lambda Legal to successfully lead both cases, which resulted in victorious Iowa Supreme Court decisions.

She is a senior shareholder of the Davis Brown Law Firm. Sharon practices in the areas of Employment Law, including employment discrimination litigation, EEO/AA, and corporate employment policies and practices, as well as Media and Communications Law.

Sharon is current Vice President of the Firm’s Board of Directors. Sharon is an advocate for civil rights issues relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community. She currently is the Chair of One-Iowa, a statewide organization seeking full equality for a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Iowa. She provides pro bono legal counsel for the Aids Project of Central Iowa, and is one of the cooperating attorneys for Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. She is former President of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center of Central Iowa. She was a charter member of Lambda Beta Nu, Des Moines’ first lesbian breakfast club.

Sharon received her J.D. with honors and her B.A. from Drake University. Before entering private practice Sharon clerked for Iowa Supreme Court Chief Justice Louis A. Lavorato.

Camilla Taylor is Senior Staff Attorney in the Midwest Regional Office of Lambda Legal, and led Lambda Legal’s successful effort in litigating Varnum v. Brien in District Court and before the Iowa Supreme Court.

Camilla also obtained a favorable ruling from the state high court in 2005 in Alons v. Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, which held that seven antigay legislators, a pastor and a chuch had no standing to challenge a judge's decision to grant two Iowa women a dissolution of their Vermont civil union.

Prior to joining Lambda Legal, Camilla was a staff attorney with the Criminal Appeals Bureau of the Legal Aid Society of New York City. She represented indigent defendants on appeal before the New York Appellate Divisions, First and Second Departments, and the New York Court of Appeals. In June, 2002, Taylor won a ruling before the New York Court of Appeals in People v. Arnold that established strict guidelines in New York State for judicial intervention in criminal trials. Before her work with the Legal Aid Society of New York City, Camilla was a litigation associate with Shearman & Sterling.

Camilla received her J.D. from Columbia Law School and her B.A. From Yale College, and is currently an adjunct professor at Northwestern University School of Law.

The Awards Dinner is Friday, June 5, 2009, at 5:30 p.m. at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines. Tickets are on sale now at mssdinner.eychanerfoundation.org.

Judy Shepard will headline the 2009 Matthew Shepard Scholarship Awards Dinner on June 5, 2009. In October 1998, Judy and Dennis Shepard lost their 21 year-old son, Matthew, to a murder motivated by anti-gay hate. Matthew’s death moved many thousands of people around the world to attend vigils and rallies in his memory.

Determined to prevent others from suffering their son’s fate, Judy and Dennis decided to turn their grief into action and established the Matthew Shepard Foundation to carry on Matthew’s legacy. The Foundation is dedicated to working toward the causes championed by Matthew during his life: social justice, diversity awareness & education, and equality for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.

Iowa's Matthew Shepard Scholarship Program honoring openly lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Iowa high school seniors.

Gold Eagle Awards are valued at $35,000 over four years and pay full tuition, books and fees at one of Iowa's three state universities: Iowa State University, the University of Northern Iowa or the University of Iowa.

Silver Eagle Awards are an initial award of $500 that may be used at any college or university in the United States. All scholarships are renewable annually for up to four years upon evidence of academic achievement and continued service to the LGBT Community.

To date, the Matthew Shepard Scholarship Program has committed over one million dollars in honoring one hundred and ten Iowans from across the state.

The Awards Dinner is Friday, June 5, 2009, at 5:30 p.m. at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines. Tickets are on sale now at mssdinner.eychanerfoundation.org.