Times Colonist

First day of class is all about hooking up

Schools use YouTube video to make sex message relevant to students

- CAROLYN THOMPSON

ALLEGANY, N. Y. — They’d barely arrived on campus at St. Bonaventur­e University, but already the new students were talking about hooking up.

Administra­tors didn’t mind. In fact, they’d encouraged — even required — it to comply with a new state law meant to prevent sex assaults on campuses.

At colleges elsewhere, students watched skits about sex, saw videos on YouTube, had face-toface sessions at orientatio­n and clicked through online courses for what has become one of the earliest lessons of college life: That only “yes” — not silence or a lack of resistance — is the cue for sex.

In July, New York became the second state, after California, to write the affirmativ­e consent standard into law for campuses. But it’s becoming the norm at colleges around the U.S. that are under the same pressure to reduce and better handle sexual assault cases.

“When they hear the specifics — that it’s about checking in all along the way: ‘Is this OK?’ ‘Are you interested in this?’ ‘Does this feel good?’ — that’s not that unreasonab­le for people,” said speaker Cindy Pierce, who is hired by colleges to deliver the message.

New York’s “Enough is Enough” legislatio­n, passed with the help of star power from Whoopi Goldberg and Lady Gaga, also gives bystanders who report assaults amnesty from drug or alcohol violations and creates a Students Bill of Rights guaranteei­ng victims the ability to report assaults and access services.

But it’s the uniform definition of affirmativ­e consent that has students recalling comedian Dave Chappelle’s “Love Contract” skit where he pulls a clipboard from the nightstand and instructs a woman to “sign here and here.”

“We get very frequently that bit where you’ve got to get a notarized contract,” said Kelly Ristow, who was brought in by St. Bonaventur­e to deliver the humour-infused “The HookUp: When it’s Hot and When it’s Not,” which made clear the difference between consensual sex and rape.

“It definitely cleared up some of the blurred lines,” 18-year-old Rachel Taylor of Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, said on her way out of the Saturday afternoon sessions at St. Bonaventur­e.

Other schools have shown students YouTube videos, including one by Blue Seat Studios with stick figures and a cup of tea analogy.

“If they say ‘no, thank you,’ then don’t make them tea. At all,” the narrator wryly instructs. “Just don’t make them tea. Don’t make them drink tea. Don’t get annoyed at them for not wanting tea. They just don’t want tea, OK?”

Another video, from Campus Clarity, uses a cellphone scenario and innuendo — “Can I play with your game centre?” — to make the point.

“They’re showing it to their students as a way to talk about sex without talking directly about sex,” said Daniel Swinton, associate executive director of ATIXA, the Associatio­n of Title IX Administra­tors.

St. Bonaventur­e administra­tors say the trick is to make the message relevant to 18- to 22-year-olds, without it coming off as a lecture.

“Young adults are very uncomforta­ble in verbally asking permission for sex. That’s just something that doesn’t come natural to them,” said Rick Trietley, the university’s vice-president for student affairs. “So we spend a lot of time talking them through that.”

The New York law advanced by Gov. Andrew Cuomo requires all incoming students, athletes and student club officers to receive education that is reinforced during the year.

“Because of the coverage in the news, statewide and nationally, this has been a hot topic. I don’t think anyone’s surprised,” said Dennis McDonald, Title IX compliance officer and vice-president for student affairs at the College of St. Rose in Albany. The school this year added an online sexual violence prevention course to its mandates for new students. “No parents are saying, ‘Why are you doing this?”’

McDonald said the law has moved colleges to revisit and focus policies meant to curb assaults.

“It doesn’t just occur in college,” McDonald said, “but we have the opportunit­y in college because we have a captive audience.”

After sitting through the St. Bonaventur­e session, 18-year-old Jacob Starowicz said it was a message worth hearing.

“If everybody else is to get this, I think they’d have a better idea of knowing what’s right and what’s wrong,” he said.

 ??  ?? Students at New York state’s private colleges and universiti­es return to campus this year with a new, affirmativ­e sexual consent policy to combat campus sexual violence.
Students at New York state’s private colleges and universiti­es return to campus this year with a new, affirmativ­e sexual consent policy to combat campus sexual violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada