Title: Negligence
1 School Law for Teachers
2School Law for Teachers
Sexual Harassment
May 2001
3Overview
- Two categories for sexual harassment cases -
- Adult (adult to adult)
- Employee initiated workplace discrimination on
the basis of race, sex, religion, color or
national origin
(Title VII of CRA of 1964
actions) - Student (adult to student or peer to peer)
- (Title IX of Educational Amendments of 1972
actions)
4Adult to Adult Harassment Employer to Employee
or Peer to Peer
5Sexual harassment of employees Title VII of Civil
Rights Actof 1964
6Sexual harassmentof employees
- Violates Title VII when
- submission is term of employment or
- submission or rejection is basis for decisions or
- situation unreasonably interferes with work
performance or - situation creates hostile environment
7- Does your school have an policy on sexual
harassment for adults who work there? - Should it?
- What would the spin-offs of such a policy be?
8Critical inquiry
Stop!
- Is the sexual conduct unwelcome?
-
School
9Quid pro quo sexual harassment of employees
- To obtain sexual favors individual with authority
makes threats or promises - Just the threat or promise is needed to pursue
10Hostile environment
- Severe or pervasive conduct that alters
conditions of employment and creates abusive
working environment - ie
- sexual remarks or sexual touching
- one severe incident like assault
- pornography or graffiti
11Hostile environment factors
- Verbal, physical, or both
- Frequency?
- Hostile and patently offensive
- Co-worker or supervisor
- Did others join?
- Directed at more than one
- Tangible harm not necessary
12- What are the two types of harassment?
- Is allegation enough to pursue charges?
- What constitutes a hostile work environment?
13Same gender harassment
- Claims can be brought under Title VII
- Members of one sex exposed to disadvantageous
terms which members of the other sex are not
14 Harassment of employees by supervisors
- Employer may be vicariously liable for
hostile environment created by supervisor -
15Tangible employment actions
- Hiring
- Firing
- Failing to promote
- Reassignment with different responsibilities
- Significant change in benefits
- If no tangible employment action taken, employer
can raise affirmative defense
16Affirmative defense
- Two necessary elements
- Employer exercised reasonable care to prevent and
correct - Employee unreasonably failed to take advantage of
preventive or corrective opportunities
17Sexual harassment by coworkers or third parties
- Employer may be liable if manager or
supervisor - knew or should have known
- failed to take timely corrective action
-
18- What is tangible action?
- What is non-tangible action?
- What is defense for tangible action?
- What is defense for non-tangible action?
- What are the two parts of an affirmative defense?
19Student Harassment by Adults
20Sexual harassment of studentsTitle IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972
21Quid pro quo sexual harassment of students
- Educational decision based on student's
submission to unwelcome sexual conduct - Equally unlawful if student resists and suffers
or submits and avoids the threatened harm.
A
if...
22Hostile environment harassment
- Must be
- committed by employee, another student or a third
party - severe
- pervasive and
- objectively offensive
- To be liable school district must have had
substantial control over the harasser. -
23Hostile environment factors
- Effect on education
- Type, frequency, and duration
- Relationship between harasser and subject
- Number of students involved
- Age and gender of students
24Sexual behavior between students and school
employees
- Always wrongful for elementary students
- Older secondary students, consider
- nature of conduct
- relationship
- students age
- authority over student
- ability to consent
25Same gender harassment
- No Supreme Court ruling under Title IX
- OCR Guidance says Title IX covers same gender
harassment
26Liability for harassment of students by employees
- Responsible school official must
- have actual knowledge
- have authority to correct
- respond with deliberate indifference
27Peer on Peer Harassment
28Peer sexual harassment
- Severe, pervasive and objectively
offensiveconduct - Denial of educational benefits
- Actual knowledge
- Deliberate indifference
29Remember Davis Test?
- Conduct is severe, pervasive, and objectively
offensive - Harassment deny education
- School had knowledge
- School responds with deliberate indifference
30Activity
- With a partner configure a paragraph that
describes how a school could be liable for peer
on peer harassment. - With this in mind what minimum attributes should
a peer on peer harassment policy have?
31Unresolved issues in peer harassment cases
- Definition of sexual harassment varies with age
- Who must have actual knowledge?
- ANY PROFESSIONAL!!!
32Third party harassment of students
- OCR Guidance Schools could be responsible for
third party harassment of students - Davis decision School must exercise substantial
control over the harasser
33Preventive steps for schools
- Anti-discrimination policies
- Age-appropriate language and instruction
- Reporting when, whom
- No retaliation
- Prompt investigation
- Training for all staff see it, stop it
report it