Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Responding to sexual violence in schools: What can educators learn?

Responding to sexual violence in schools: What can educators learn?
Education specifically about sexual assault or gender-based violence is not enough. Boys need access to a range of stories about masculinity while growing up. Credit: ,

As news about alleged gang at St. Michael's College in Toronto dominated in and even in the past , some parents and educators posed a familiar question: What can to prevent sexual violence among youth?

Global news reported police at the Toronto school, and three other possible assaults including one with a belt. In the face of these horrific allegations, can education offer some solutions?

The question, however urgent, is naïve because it assumes that schools are safe. More education is not simply the solution. Schools are also part of the problem.

Research shows that for girls, LGBTQ youth, youth of colour, disabled youth and young people who, for whatever reason, fall outside narrow definitions of what it means to be a young man or woman.

That is a lot of people who cannot count on schools to be inclusive, welcoming places.

No magic bullet

As I argue in my book , the wish that a single solution could magically erase gender-based violence in schools is unrealistic. The wish for a magic bullet solution masks the complexity of these issues, both for youth and adults.

Our response to reports of sexual violence in schools, as educators and , is to search for answers in programs, policies and curriculum. We hope such action could educate young people out of hatred and ignorance and into tolerance and knowledge.

Researchers advocate new anti-bullying policies, the formation of or the development of a more comprehensive curriculum.

CBC reported that the now-former principal of St. Michael's College, Greg Reeves, told a meeting of alumni that club.

Certainly, all these efforts matter even as no one action can fix the problem once and for all. Our efforts to support students and transform schools will require a patient and holistic approach. To make schools more welcoming places for all students, I suggest three responses to the question of what education can do to prevent .

New stories of masculinity

High schools are laboratories for masculinity and femininity. We know that the describing what it means to become a man and what it means to become a woman are especially rigid during adolescence.

Boys have been taught to hold each other to an impossible that is tied to race, class and ability. Girls, too, feel enormous pressure to take on of femininity as they learn to navigate an increasingly fraught culture of heterosexuality.

For young people who feel constrained by these claustrophobic ideas of masculinity and femininity, schools can play an important role in offering young people alternative narratives of becoming men and women.

Former private school teacher and education researcher Adam Howard spent six years examining privilege and masculinity in an elite school environment. In his book , he discusses the corrosive effects of toxic masculinity especially for boys who do not participate in competitive sports or other prized traditions.

Not narrow for anyone

All boys need access to a range of stories about growing up. As interdisciplinary scholar Lance T. McCready argues, boys need a multitude of stories to refute the violence and aggression of masculinity but still of belonging, vulnerability, friendship and desire.

Throughout the school day, across the curriculum, students should encounter a range of representations of masculinity and femininity. In different classrooms, from English, biology, art and health education, the curriculum should be stacked with diverse stories of what it means to come of age as a young man or woman today.

Expanding definitions of masculinity and femininity not only help young heterosexual students resist narrow conceptions of being and becoming men and women; the expansiveness also makes more room in schools for LGBTQ+ students.

Schools have a responsibility to not only protect LGBTQ+ students from discrimination and violence but also to create learning environments that welcome sexuality and gender into the everyday life of the school. Part of creating this learning environment involves including affirmative representations of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and gender non-binary people, communities and issues in the curriculum.

Stop teaching, start listening

Finally, as educators and researchers, we need to rethink our confidence that, as adults, our responsibility is to teach and young people's task is to learn. Rather than only pose the question, What can we do?, We might also ask: What can we learn?

Researchers routinely advocate for in school policy and design. However, that commitment can be easily shed when schools are faced with crises like the alleged incidents at St. Michael's. The time it would take to listen to young people is often trumped by the demand to respond immediately. The patient work of understanding takes too long.

But, as my research on sex education and LGBTQ youth indicates, young people's experiences of sexuality and gender in are than anti-bullying programs or sex education curriculum can allow.

Even as strive to understand themselves as sexual and gendered beings, they also redefine the terrain and terms of sexuality and gender. If we pause and listen to youth, we may hear new stories of and femininity echoing through the hallways.

Provided by The Conversation

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

Citation: Responding to sexual violence in schools: What can educators learn? (2018, November 30) retrieved 3 June 2025 from /news/2018-11-sexual-violence-schools.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further


3 shares

Feedback to editors