18新利开户下载网址|2001年4月18新利

编辑

Skip to content Students Connecting student life at WashU Close Find Resources Search for: Search What I Need COVID-19 Information Contacts Get Crisis Support Information View Safety Information Find a Location Attend an Event Plan an Event Find a Form or Policy Departments Athletics Campus Life Center for Career Engagement Center for Diversity and Inclusion Dialogue Across Difference (DxD) Disability Resources Gateway Battalion | St. Louis Army ROTC Habif Health and Wellness Center Office for International Student Engagement Office for International Students and Scholars Office for Religious, Spiritual and Ethical Life Office of Military & Veteran Services Office of Scholar Programs Recreation Relationship and Sexual Violence Prevention Center Residential Life Student Conduct and Community Standards Student Transitions & Family Programs Taylor Family Center for Student Success TRIO Student Support Services WashU Cares All Resources Search for: Search Community Living Relationship and Sexual Violence Prevention Center Green Dot Bystander Intervention Program Washington University Speaks Out—What Is Your Green Dot? from Kuumba on Vimeo. The Green Dot Bystander Intervention program teaches skills to recognize incidents of potential harm and strategies to intervene in order to create a safer campus. If  you are interested in learning how to be an active bystander, please email the Green Dot program. Introduced in 2011 at Washington University, the Green Dot program is a proactive way to help promote the safety of all persons on campus. Student-affiliated groups and organizations may request a Green Dot training that will delve into issues of power-based violence on campus, dynamics of bystander intervention, and proactive ways to step in and support fellow students and acquaintances when situations may become harmful. Green Dot trainings for student groups are highly interactive and are designed to take six hours, scheduled over a weekend day. Interested in learning more about Green Dot? Please email the Green Dot program. Training Opportunities Coming Soon. Empirical and Theoretical Background Sexual assault is a major public health problem across American college campuses. Currently, one in five women will experience rape while in college.1 The problem hasn’t improved or regressed over the years – it has stayed about the same. In 2013, Congress enacted the Campus Sexual Violence Elimination Act, which requires primary prevention of sexual violence for all incoming undergraduate students.2 A report from the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Division of Violence Prevention, categorizes bystander intervention as primary prevention programming in the second highest ranking and as “selected programs found to be effective in reducing risk factors for sexual violence or related outcomes using a rigorous evaluation design”.3 The CDC also reported that, “more evidence is needed, but the bystander approach to prevention is already gaining traction in the field.”3 Theoretically, the Green Dot program and other bystander intervention programs draw from the Theory of Planned Behavior and assumes that rape myths, or attitudes, and confidence, or self-efficacy, influence bystander attitudes which in turn influences actual bystander behavior.4 Nationally, the Green Dot program has been evaluated and has some robust results. One evaluation found that students trained in Green Dot had significantly higher rates of self-reported bystander behaviors than students who were just given a Green Dot speech as well as those students who received no intervention.5 A second study found the university that implemented the Green Dot curriculum had lower rates of sexual harassment and stalking than two campuses that did not have Green Dot.2 At the University of New Hampshire, a random sample of undergraduates were evaluated (n=186) and it was found that females and individuals who knew someone sexually assaulted engaged in more bystander behaviors.6 Additionally, it has been found that students with higher rape myth acceptance are less willing to intervene with bystander behaviors. The following groups are at a higher risk for having high rape myth acceptance: men, members of fraternities or sororities, student athletes, and individuals who have never received sexual assault education3,7,8; thus further justifying the targeted groups for Green Dot training at WashU. References Evaluation of the Green Dot Bystander Intervention to Reduce Interpersonal Violence Among College Students Across Three Campuses SEXUAL VIOLENCE PREVENTION THROUGH BYSTANDER EDUCATION: AN EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATION The Men ’s Program: Does it impact college men ’ s bystander efficacy and willingness to intervene? Measuring Bystander Attitudes and Behavior to Prevent Sexual Violence. Evaluation of Green Dot: An Active Bystander Intervention to Reduce Sexual Violence on College Campuses Related Resources Anonymous Report Form – Relationship and Sexual Violence Prevention Center This anonymous reporting mechanism is available to report incidents of sexual harassment, sexual violence, intimate partner violence and stalking. Green Dot Bystanders See Green Dot bystanders in the WashU community, including students, staff and faculty. Meet the Green Dot Trainers The Green Dot training team is comprised of faculty and staff members who completed a four-day, 28-hour training in the program. Community Living Diversity and Inclusion Student Involvement Healthy Excellence Student Success Career Engagement About the division: Danforth University Center, Suite 200 [email protected] 314-935-4526 Hours: Mon-Fri 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. LEARN ABOUT THE DIVISION Additional Contacts: Habif Health and Wellness Center 314-935-6666 Residential Life 314-935-5050 Resources for: New students Graduate and professional students Parents and family members Have a question or complaint? We love to hear from you. Send us questions or concerns through our confidential form. Student feedback form ©2024 Washington University in St. Louis

18新利备用官网 18新利备用官网 新利18如何提现 新利18为什么都不玩
Copyright ©18新利开户下载网址|2001年4月18新利 The Paper All rights reserved.