Students developing solutions to campus sexual and gender-based violence

THE CONVERSATION

Students developing solutions to campus sexual and gender-based violence

Faculty and university staff at Queen's are embedding training to prevent gender-based and sexual violence into curricular goals of both arts and STEM classes.

By Rebecca Hall, Assistant Professor, Global Development Studies

September 8, 2023

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A group of people protest sexual assault and misogyny. (Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona)

Some universities have prevent and respond to gender-based violence, following the stabbing attack this past summer on June 28 at the .

The ConversationPolice recently added an to previous charges faced by a man accused of entering a classroom and stabbing three people in a gender studies class. Police believe the attack .

While institutional responses pertaining to increasing security or surveillance are important, we can鈥檛 build a wall big enough, or an alarm system sharp enough, to protect students from hate, patriarchy or .

And in some cases, responses like added policing can lead to , especially for .

As one response to the problem of gender-based violence on campus, a project at Queen鈥檚 University is piloting gender-based/sexual violence training that meets students where they鈥檙e at 鈥 the classroom 鈥 and engages them through their field of study.

Gender-based violence on campus

The attack at Waterloo is symptomatic of larger issues of sexual and gender-based violence present in society, especially on university .

Gender-based and sexual violence lies at the intersection of , sexism and homophobia.

A recent initiative to on Canadian campuses reports research conducted about showed 71 per cent of students have either witnessed or experienced unwanted sexualized behaviours in a post-secondary setting. Racialized, Indigenous and 2SLGBTQI+ students are disproportionately of sexual assault.

Prevention strategies matter

through community mobilization, comprehensive education and structural change.

For many universities, the vision is there, but the road is long. And in the context of limited resources, stretched staff and stressed students, how can anti-violence practitioners reach students, especially those not already engaged in these conversations?

One hurdle is the divide between faculty who have been historically tasked with students鈥 education and knowledge, and administration, who have been tasked with the welfare of students, including responding to and preventing sexual violence on campus. The project we are involved in brings these approaches together.

Reaching more students

Co-authors of this story, Rebecca Rappeport, a sexual violence specialist in the Queen鈥檚 University Human Rights and Equity Office, and Rebecca Hall, a professor in the department of global development studies, worked together. We piloted embedding gender-based/sexual violence prevention material into the curricular goals of a global development studies classroom.

Rappeport was invited to lead a one-and-a-half hour workshop during a first-year global development studies class. The workshop focussed on educating students about gender and sexual violence as a , and raising awareness about services available at the university and in the community.

Afterwards, students were asked to engage the analytical tools they were building in the classroom to create proposals addressing this problem.

In keeping with to teaching, students were given advance notice of the collaboration and a 鈥渘o questions asked鈥 opt-out option with an alternative assignment.

Engineering students involved

The workshop framed campus sexual and gender-based violence as a 鈥 that is, a problem that requires multiple approaches and intersectional and transdisciplinary collaboration.

Framing gender-based and sexual violence as a wicked problem means that the embedded approach lends itself well to most academic departments 鈥 not only to departments focused on feminist theory or equity.

Last winter, Rappeport also brought an embedded workshop, similarly with an 鈥渙pt out鈥 option, to the second-year mechatronics and robotics classroom of engineering professor Joshua Marshall.

Following Rappeport鈥檚 workshop in an engineering class, students were asked to apply their emerging disciplinary knowledge to the problem of gender and sexual violence on campus. In groups, students focused on how their engineering knowledge could contribute creative strategies for addressing campus violence.

Students as agents of change

The training met students where they鈥檙e at (the classroom) and engaged them through their field of study, with incentives: grades.

This form of engagement reached beyond students who tend to be engaged in gender issues, including significantly more male students.

But beyond this practical aim, in embedding the training in classroom learning, we sought to position the , rather than solely potential perpetrators, victims or witnesses.

Students are encouraged to consider developing new approaches, technologies and policies to work towards ending gender-based violence: to see themselves as inventors, social scientists and leaders.

Preliminary survey results from the two piloted classes showed a significant increase in students鈥 self-assessment of their knowledge, and their ability to help solve issues related to sexual violence, linking their discipline to these issues. There was almost 100 per cent participation from both classes with over 300 students.

Expanding pilot program

This fall, Rappeport will extend this pilot program with Queen鈥檚 engineering, kinesiology and health sciences faculty, with plans for further expansion.

Sexual and gender-based violence can seem like an insurmountable problem, but interdisciplinary thinking encourages creative approaches to social change. Using their own university as a case study allows students to combine their lived experience on campus with classroom knowledge to think through a major social problem.

With this teaching approach, we aim to layer immediate approaches to campus violence with a vision for longer-term structural change. We do so by encouraging students who are often missed in traditional prevention programming to integrate this awareness into their future careers, whether that鈥檚 community organizing, writing policy or building robots.

Rebecca Rappeport, Sexual Violence Prevention and Response Community Outreach and Student Support Worker at Queen鈥檚 University, co-authored this story.The Conversation

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, Assistant Professor, Global Development Studies,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

The Conversation is seeking new academic contributors. Researchers wishing to write articles should contact Melinda Knox, Director, Thought Leadership and Strategic Initiatives, at knoxm@queensu.ca.

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