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Sexual Harassment

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Title: Sexual Harassment


1
Sexual Harassment Other Prohibited Harassment
  • An overview for C-FB employees

2
  • Sexual Harassment and
  • Other Prohibited Harassment
  • are forms of discrimination which are strictly
    prohibited by District Board policies DIA, FFH,
    and federal law.

3
Sexual Harassment Defined
  • Unwelcome conduct, either verbal or physical,
    that would not occur but for the sex of the
    individual.

4
Sexual Harassment and Other Prohibited Harassment
in Schools
  • Employee-to-Student
  • Employee-to-Employee
  • Studentto-Student

5
Types of Sexual and Other Prohibited Harassment
  • QUID PRO QUO
  • When an individual in a position of authority
    offers a subordinate something in exchange for
    some form of sexual favor
  • HOSTILE ENVIRONMENT
  • Is created when unwelcome advances, requests,
    or conduct have the effect of interfering with an
    individuals performance or creating an
    intimidating, hostile, or otherwise offensive
    learning or working environment

6
Examples of Quid Pro Quo
  • A teacher may offer a student a better grade or a
    particular position on an athletic team in
    exchange for a kiss.
  • A supervisor may offer an employee a higher
    evaluation or a promotion in exchange for
    accompanying the supervisor to dinner.

7
Signs of a Hostile Environment
  • High rate of absenteeism
  • Low morale
  • Performance slips
  • Failing grades
  • Discipline problems

8
Examples of Sexual Harassment
  • Sexual advances or requests for sexual favors
  • Touching intimate body parts
  • Coercing or forcing a sexual act on another
  • Jokes or conversations of a sexual nature
  • Engaging in sexually oriented conversations for
    the purpose of personal sexual gratification
  • Telephoning or text messaging students at home or
    elsewhere for inappropriate social relationships

9
Examples of Other Prohibited Harassment
  • Offensive or derogatory language directed at
    another persons religious beliefs or practices,
    accent, skin color, or need for workplace
    accommodation
  • Threatening or intimidating conduct
  • Offensive jokes, name calling, slurs, or rumors
  • Physical aggression or assault
  • Display of graffiti or printed material promoting
    racial, ethnic, or other negative stereotypes or
  • Other types of aggressive conduct such as theft
    or damage to property.

10
Sexual Harassment Employee-to-Student
  • A District employee causes the student to believe
    that the student must submit to the conduct in
    order to participate in a school program or
    activity, or that the employee will make an
    educational decision based on whether or not the
    student submits to the conduct

11
Sexual Harassment Employee-to-Student
  • Includes both WELCOME and UNWELCOME sexual
    advances requests for sexual favors sexually
    motivated physical, verbal, or nonverbal conduct
    or other conduct or communication of a sexual
    nature

12
Sexual Harassment Employee-to-Student
  • Sexual harassment or harassment of any kind of
    students by employees is always a violation of
    law
  • The fact that a student sought the conduct is of
    no merit
  • There is always the presumption that the conduct
    was unwelcome between an employee and a student
  • Any sexual relationship between a student and a
    District employee is always prohibited, even if
    consensual

13
Sexual Harassment Employee-to-Employee
  • Submission to the conduct is a condition of
    an


    employees
    employment or such conduct is used as a basis
    for employment actions affecting the employee
  • The conduct is so severe that it unreasonably
    interferes with the employees work performance
    or creates an intimidating, threatening,
    hostile, or offensive work environment.

14
Sexual Harassment Student-to-Student
  • Affects the students ability to participate in
    or benefit from an educational program of
    activity, or creates an intimidating,
    threatening, hostile, or offensive educational
    environment
  • Has the purpose or effect of substantially or
    unreasonable interfering with the students
    academic performance or
  • Otherwise adversely affects the students
    education opportunities.

15
Other Prohibited Harassment Employee-to-Employee,
Employee-to-Student and Student-to-Student
  • Unwelcome physical, verbal, or nonverbal
    conduct based on the student/employee race,
    color, gender, national origin, disability, or
    religion that is so severe, persistent, or
    pervasive that the conduct
  • Affects a persons ability to participate in or
    benefit from an educational program or activity,
    or creates an intimidating, threatening, hostile
    or offensive education/work environment
  • Has the purpose or effect of substantially or
    unreasonably interfering with the students
    academic performance or employees work or
  • Otherwise adversely affects the students
    educational opportunities or the employees
    employment opportunities.

16
Key Word Unwelcome
  • For any conduct to constitute sexual harassment
    or other prohibited harassment, it must be
    unwelcome by the individual complaining of the
    conduct EXCEPT in Employee-to-Student
    situations. Employee-to-Student harassment is
    ALWAYS considered to be unwelcome.
  • Conduct which may be offensive to one person may
    not be to another
  • The victim has an obligation to tell the harasser
    that he/she finds the conduct offensive
  • If the behavior continues beyond that point, then
    it is sexual harassment or other prohibited
    harassment.
  • A single incident can constitute sexual
    harassment if it is an occurrence such as sexual
    assault.

17
Employee ResponsibilityProtect Yourself from a
Charge of Any Kind of Harassment
  • Do not socialize with students
  • Stop whatever you are doing if you sense
    discomfort from a student/employee
  • Dress appropriately for the school environment
  • Conduct yourself in a business-like manner

18
Employee ResponsibilityProtection of Students
  • Treat students complaints of sexual harassment
    or harassment seriously do not ever take such
    allegations lightly.
  • If you see sexual harassment or harassment of any
    type occurring, stop it!
  • Make appropriate discipline referrals in
    accordance to the Student Code of Conduct.
  • Immediately report the conduct and your actions
    of remediation to your supervisor/principal.
  • Be sure that the report is in writing dated and
    signed.

19
Victims ResponsibilityWhat to do if you are
sexually harassed or harassed by someones conduct
  • Let the person know that the comments or actions
    are unwelcome
  • Employees - Immediately report the harassment to
    your principal/supervisor
  • Students Immediately report the harassment to a
    teacher, counselor, principal, or other District
    employee
  • In your report, list the time, place and persons
    present using who, what, where, when and why

20
District Responsibility
  • Have a comprehensive policy prohibiting sexual
    harassment
  • Clearly communicate sexual harassment and
    harassment policies (DIA and FFH) and complaint
    procedures to employees, students, and parents
  • Train administrators to recognize, investigate,
    and resolve sexual harassment claims
  • Train employees to recognize and report sexual
    harassment, understand appropriate and
    inappropriate interaction with students and
    report any incidents that a student might
    misinterpret as sexual harassment to their
    supervisors
  • Train teachers to appropriately discipline
    students involved in incidents of
    student-to-student sexual harassment
  • Train and inform students how to recognize and
    report allegations and to whom they can report

21
  • It is important for schools to create an
    environment that encourages students or employees
    who believe they have been subject to sexual
    harassment to come forward.

22
The Principal/Supervisor Must Immediately
Notify the Appropriate District Officials
  • Dr. Mary Hopkins employee-to-employee or
    employee-to-student allegations
  • Kim Holland employee-to-student or
    student-to-student allegations
  • All complaints of sexual harassment and
    harassment will be investigated promptly,
    thoroughly and as confidentially as possible
  • Retaliation toward the accuser will not be
    tolerated

23
School District LiabilityPersonal Liability
  • Deliberate Indifference
  • When one who has the authority to address the
    alleged discrimination and to institute
    corrective measures has actual knowledge of
    discrimination and fails to adequately respond.
  • Gebser v. Lago Vista ISD
  • 118 S. Ct. 1989 (1998)

24
  • An administrator who shows deliberate
    indifference by failing to investigate and
    prevent the abuse of a student can be held liable
    for a subordinates abuse of a student.
  • Doe v. Taylor ISD
  • Administrators must take action when sexual
    harassment claims are reported to protect
    students and avoid personal liability.

25
Standard of Care
  • The District shall exercise reasonable care to
  • prevent and correct promptly any sexual
  • harassment behavior and develop preventive or
  • corrective measures to address sexually harassing
  • behavior.
  • DIA (Legal)

26
Sexual Harassment Other Prohibited Harassment
  • An overview for C-FB employees
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