“…(Knisely, 2022f, p. 166) There are numerous possible ways that these aims can be taken up, and often these strategies will include (a) exploring with and alongside students as a part of individualizing learning, decentering the classroom, troubling student understandings of expertise, and engaging with the real world, enlanguaged experiences of LGBTQ+ people, particularly those that are locally relevant, (b) making space throughout the curriculum, de-sensationalizing and articulating the value of LGBTQ+ discussions as a part of critical literacy, rather than confining queer and trans knowledges to specific days, units, or courses, (c) engaging in critical discussions and close reading, especially with the goal of laying bare how language, assumptions, and normativities shape perceptions of reality and constrain certain forms of being, and (d) directly connecting queer and trans content to learning goals, as this can help to demonstrate gender and sexuality's importance in languaging (Knisely & Paiz, 2021;Knisely & Russell, 2024, Chapter 1). These and related gender-just pedagogies are distinct from, but build on and coexist with, those articulated by colleagues in queer applied linguistics (Paiz, 2020;Paiz & Coda, 2021), crip linguistics (Namboodiripad & Henner, 2022), and many others who take up traditions of culturally relevant, critical pedagogies (Hooks, 2014;Ladson-Billings & Dixson, 2021), principally because-although they center gender and its modalities-"there can be no gender-just pedagogy that is not also always concerned with equity and justice as it relates to race, class, sexuality, disability, and all other aspects of identity through which we are positioned in society" (Knisely, 2022a, p. 150). Their applications and manifestations equally span the breadth of language and linguistic subfields, including not only applied linguistics but also cultural, literary, and translation studies, for example (Attig, 2022;Conrod, 2022a;Disbro, 2022;Konnelly et al, 2022;Kosnick, 2019;Provitola, 2022).…”