GLENDORA, Calif. – Meet Mx. Pat Cordova-Goff.

The 18-year-old Citrus College student-trustee wants everybody to know the college is allowing her to use the title “Mx.” before her name in official correspondence, and on the school’s website, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune reports.

“Being able to use the title allows for so many chances to educate people,” Cordova-Goff said. “People are already asking, ‘what does it mean, how is it pronounced?’”

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Unfortunately, college officials don’t exactly share her enthusiasm and refused to talk to the news site about the issue.

Cordova-Goff said the honorific title makes her feel good because she doesn’t conform to the binary boy-girl world, and Mx. more accurately reflects her ambiguous gender status.

“When I first found out about ‘Mx.’ I was so happy,” Cordova-Goff said. “It’s a way to be myself without being forced to pick a side.”

Apparently, the Mx. title is one of the big new things with the “gender-fluid” community, which is taking the LGBT activism of the past decade to the extreme.

“The next wave of activism is people who are really undoing the binary, undoing the categories and saying, ‘that doesn’t fit me, I’m gender-fluid,’” Drian Juarez, manager of the Transgender Economic Empowerment Project, told the Tribune.

“Part of the community’s empowerment has been naming my own identity,” Juarez said. “That’s why we have language that is evolving so quickly, because people have the freedom to self-identify in ways that feel good to them.”

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University of Southern California education professor and clinical psychologist Mary Andres thinks the Mx. title is “a positive move.”

“Lexicon changes all the time and there’s always new words put in the dictionary all the time,” she told the Tribune.

Cordova-Goff was elected student trustee at Citrus College this month and will represent students on the school board next school year. Her gender-neutral activism started as a student at Azusa High School, where she was involved in LGBT groups, was a cheerleader, was a homecoming princess, and played varsity softball, according to the Tribune.

She’s super excited to use her new student trustee title to really amp up her activism, although she’s already active in student government, the Gender and Sexuality Alliance, and the student newspaper.

“(Using Mx.) totally demonstrates a great strike in acceptance and mobility for transgender students on this campus,” Cordova-Goff told the Tribune. “Not only will I be their first trans student-trustee, but they’re open to allowing me to use my preferred titles.”

The sort-of announcement about the official Mx. title at Citrus College follows the latest breaking news from the forefront of the battle against gender norms that Miley Cyrus identifies as gender fluid, or genderqueer, or something like that, according to multiple media reports.

“I didn’t want to be a boy,” she told Out magazine. “I kind of wanted to be nothing. I don’t relate to what people would say defines a girl or boy, and I think that’s what I had to understand: Being a girl isn’t what I hate, it’s the box that I get put in.”

Cyrus also essentially told the Associated Press she’s bisexual.

So now, in addition to Bruce Jenner, America’s youth can look to role models in the gender-trans community like Cordova-Goff and Cyrus to help shape their own sexuality.