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Sexual Harassment Pervasive In U.S. Middle And High Schools, Survey Finds

DAVID CRARY   11/07/11 10:16 AM ET  AP

NEW YORK — It can be a malicious rumor whispered in the hallway, a lewd photo arriving by cell phone, hands groping where they shouldn't. Added up, it's an epidemic – student-on-student sexual harassment that is pervasive in America's middle schools and high schools.

During the 2010-11 school year, 48 percent of students in grades 7-12 experienced some form of sexual harassment in person or electronically via texting, email and social media, according to a major national survey being released Monday by the American Association of University Women.

The harassers often thought they were being funny, but the consequences for their targets can be wrenching, according to the survey. Nearly a third of the victims said the harassment made them feel sick to their stomach, affected their study habits or fueled reluctance to go to school at all.

"It's reached a level where it's almost a normal part of the school day," said one of the report's co-authors, AAUW director of research Catherine Hill. "It's somewhat of a vicious cycle. The kids who are harassers often have been harassed themselves."

The survey, conducted in May and June, asked 1,002 girls and 963 boys from public and private schools nationwide whether they had experienced any of various forms of sexual harassment. These included having someone make unwelcome sexual comments about them, being called gay or lesbian in a negative way, being touched in an unwelcome sexual way, being shown sexual pictures they didn't want to see, and being the subject of unwelcome sexual rumors.

The survey quoted one ninth-grade girl as saying she was called a whore "because I have many friends that are boys." A 12th-grade boy said schoolmates circulated an image showing his face attached to an animal having sex.

In all, 56 percent of the girls and 40 percent of the boys said they had experienced at least one incident of sexual harassment during the school year.

After being harassed, half of the targeted students did nothing about it. Of the rest, some talked to parents or friends, but only 9 percent reported the incident to a teacher, guidance counselor or other adult at school, according to the survey.

Reasons for not reporting included doubts it would have any impact, fears of making the situation worse, and concerns about the staff member's reaction.

The AAUW had examined the problem previously – in 1993 and 2001 – and found that more than 80 percent of students reported experiencing sexual harassment at least once in their school career. The new study was not directly comparable because it looked at only a single year, but co-author Holly Kearl of AAUW's Legal Advocacy Fund said the problem had not eased and may have worsened because of the spread of electronic and online harassment.

The report comes at a time when the problem of bullying at schools is in the spotlight, in part because of several recent suicides of beleaguered students.

The AAUW report observes that sexual harassment and bullying can sometimes overlap, such as the taunting of youths who are perceived to be gay or lesbian, but it says there are important distinctions. For example, there are some state laws against bullying, but serious sexual harassment – at a level which interferes with a student's education_ is prohibited under the federal gender-equality legislation known as Title IX.

"Too often, the more comfortable term bullying is used to describe sexual harassment, obscuring the role of gender and sex in these incidents," the report says. "Schools are likely to promote bullying prevention while ignoring or downplaying sexual harassment."

Fatima Goss Graves, a vice president of the National Women's Law Center in Washington, said the ultimate goal should be to deter hurtful student interactions however they are defined.

"Schools get too caught up in the label," she said. "If it's the sort of conduct that's interfering with a student's performance, it ought to be stopped."

The survey asked students for suggestions on how to reduce sexual harassment at their schools. More than half favored systematic punishments for harassers and said there should be a mechanism for reporting harassment anonymously.

The AAUW report said all schools should create a sexual-harassment policy and make sure it is publicized and enforced. It said schools must ensure that students are educated about what their rights are under Title IX, with special attention paid to encouraging girls to respond assertively to harassment since they are targeted more often than boys.

Niobe Way, a professor of applied psychology at New York University who has studied adolescent relationships, suggested that school anti-harassment policies might have only limited impact without broader cultural changes that break down gender stereotypes.

"You have a culture that doesn't value boys having close intimate relations and being emotional or empathetic," she said.

Bill Bond, a former high school principal who is a school safety expert for the National Association of Secondary School Principals, said there had been in shift in the nature of sexual harassment among students over recent decades.

Overt attempts to exploit a fellow student sexually have become less common, while there's more use of sexual remarks to degrade or insult someone, he said.

"Words can cut a kid all the way to the heart," Bond said. "And when it's on the computers and cell phones, there's no escape. It's absolutely devastating and vicious to a kid."

The survey was conducted for AAUW by Knowledge Networks, and students answered the questions online, rather than to a person, to maximize the chances that they would answer sensitive questions candidly. Households were selected through national probability sampling, and were provided with equipment and Internet access if needed.

The AAUW said the margin of error for the full sample of the survey was plus or minus 2.2 percent, with a larger margin of error for subgroups.

___

Online:

AAUW: http://www.aauw.org/

___

David Crary can be reached at http://twitter.com/CraryAP

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04:42 PM on 11/12/2011
I had posted earlier on this subject. I had said when I was in high school I thought the girls where worst then the boys, my girlfriends would allways sexually haras the boys and when they got caught they would blame the boys, saying they started it and the boys would allways get in trouble, when they did nothing wrong. Sexual harasment works both ways but it is only men who are looked at like demons
09:28 AM on 11/14/2011
Since men initiate sex more than women do in the adult world, don't you think in high school the percentage of boys harrassing girls is much higher than the percentage of girls harrassing boys?
11:11 AM on 11/14/2011
The only stats I believe are indepentant stats, i dont believe stats from anyone ,when they are funded by an private agencie. I am telling you what I saw with my own two eyes, if you dont like my opinion I dont know what to tell you
02:58 PM on 11/09/2011
A most effective way, in my opinion and from my own experience in high school, to end sexual harrassment in middle and high schools is by putting girls in a "girls only school" and boys in a "boys only school", another words, separate gender schools. I also think students in ALL schools should wear uniforms so they view each other as equals.
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Fido0311
Pro 2A white Conservative
06:08 PM on 11/13/2011
No way then when they do see each other you got them going at eachother like a starved dog after a piece of meat!
09:51 PM on 11/13/2011
LOL! No it is not like that in those same gender school/classes. Girls get better grades in an all girls school because the boys don't get in their way and the boys study harder on their own because they don't get help from the girls.
10:51 PM on 11/14/2011
I was a little naive in my previous answer. Every boy and girl is different, they would still be seeing opposite genders outside of schools.
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ignacio sanabria
Mirror synapses at work
06:28 PM on 11/08/2011
An experiment: Take away the cellular phones of the kids when entering school and give them back in their way home.
12:05 PM on 11/08/2011
God, under the standards of this study anyone can say that they've been sexually harassed. I wrestled in high school. I always heard, "Dude, you guys look gay in those outfits,". So, by the standards of this article I was sexually harassed. There are cases where real sexual harassment happens, and they should be dealt with, but for Christ's sakes, teachers have enough to do without having to be some sort of HR dept.
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hawaiianstile
all hail the balance of nature.
11:20 AM on 11/08/2011
well thats the kind of message your society is giving these kids, are you surprised by these findings?
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pepper1311
POGS are dirt
10:58 AM on 11/08/2011
Take away those phones!
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Lila Folster
10:07 PM on 12/05/2011
My granddaughter's high school bans cell phones, so the kids just set them on vibrate. Out of sight out of mind.
09:21 AM on 11/08/2011
it is horrible to hear such bad news even from the developed countries. a pitiable situation. who has to save the children if the things are going on like this every where. really horrible.
05:15 AM on 11/08/2011
Kids are still getting beat up at school. If we have not even stopped assaults how is it we have found time to move on to mere harassment. I remember the stop the violence campaigns and when schools just started getting metal detectors. Does anybody remember the VIOLENCE? It seems if a problem affects boys it's ignored but if we presume it's females we are ready to rearrange the whole society. I am sick of boys being neglected for any issue that might annoy a female. I know it's hip to focus on girls but some times the cool thing is not the right thing. Girls are not the ones who seem to have crippling self esteem problems, it's our young men who have been falling behind for decades. What are we doing to help them? Another round of male bashing is not the solution. Shifting focus to gay and lesbian youth is not the solution. The boys lives matter, and it's time we told them that.
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jazz41
11:07 AM on 11/08/2011
Every child matters whether they are male or female. And every child, whether they are male or female, should have help with any situation that causes a problem for them. Nobody is bashing males. We are just asking for everyone to treat others in a decent manner. Is that too much to ask?
05:18 PM on 11/12/2011
Both males and females haras each other, but it is onlt the girls who are looked at as victims and males as demonds
02:13 PM on 11/08/2011
"What are we doing to help them? "

Yes, what? I see a lot of grown up men whining about feminism. I don't see any constructive ideas. I don't see any of them interested in actual solutions. Seems like they're only interested in another round of feminist bashing. Boys having problems are just another convenient jumping off point.
05:21 PM on 11/12/2011
Treat both genders equally, but you are part of the problem, if someone writes something that would suggust a male is a victim you get out right angry.Just look at your past post. You bashed me because I stated my girlfriends where the biggest violater of sexual harrasment. Its people like you, who dont want both genders protected equally
04:01 AM on 11/08/2011
Sexual harrassments in schools, that is easy to take care of. Parents need to explain to their children and teens that when someone harrasses them sexually, it is because that person has Sexually Transmittable Diseases (STD). About half or more students already have STD, they may have gotten it sexually or through infected needles from illegal drugs, or from used ink for tattoos. Teens with STD don't want to be the only few with STD so they are eager to spread their infections to everybody else. They may lie and say they don't have STD but bear in mind word of mouth doesn't prove they don't have STD. The only way to know for sure if someone has STD or not is by a thorough blood test(s).

Teachers, counselors and school principals need to put up graphic/animated posters in the hallways in schools and classrooms, library rooms, etc. about the verbal/social behaviors of people with STD. Make sure those posters are high enough out of reach so students can see them and so they can't take those posters off the walls.
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judew777
09:23 AM on 11/08/2011
very strange,way to put it
02:51 PM on 11/09/2011
To judew777: You say "very strange,wa­y to put it". A person who does not have STD and doesn't want to get STD is not going to want to be sexually active. Those who already have STD (especially HIV/AIDS and Herpes) are not going to worry about getting STD because they already have the worst kind of STD there is, so as a result, they tend to be loose and careless about being sexually active and tend to expect others to be sexually active also.
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judew777
03:26 PM on 11/09/2011
Yes ,you are so right ,many don't care..
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pepper1311
POGS are dirt
10:56 AM on 11/08/2011
Do you say STD?
11:30 PM on 11/08/2011
“Do you say STD?”

Only if the person tries to make the first move on me or gets sexually suggestive to me. I say "I don't want any STD". Anybody who can't handle this kind of answer should have known better not to get sexually suggestive in the first place. There are social organizations for people with STD to mingle with each other. Do I belong to those? No, because I don't have STD.
12:07 AM on 11/09/2011
I did answer your question but for some unknown reason I don't see it posted.

Only when someone gets sexually suggestive to me or tries to get it on with me I say "I don't want any STD". There are social clubs or organizations for people with STD to mingle or socialize with each other.

However, with teens maybe it would help to say "I don't want any STD or drugs" because usually they offer drugs or alcohol before or during their sexual activity to commit pornography for money. Maybe including the word "drugs" will be enough to scare them away because they won't want to get caught and arrested.
10:37 PM on 11/07/2011
This has been going on a long time in NYC Schools. It is taken so lightly that school officials don't even face dismissal or harsh reprimand after failing to contact the police when they encounter sexual harassment. One example is current NYC Assistant Principle Alberto M. Garcia -- In 2005 an 11-year-old girl told Garcia she had been sexually abused by a 14-year-old boy. The girl's mother contacted The Daily News out of desperation, but nothing was done. Garcia lost his post at that school due to an unrelated gun incident. He is now employed at Progress High School for Professional Careers in Brooklyn NY. Garcia failed to contact the police so that his reputation as principal of the school would not suffer, with little or no care for the safety and well being of the students. This man is currently paid a 6 figure salary, despite the fact that he has appeared in around 10 or so stories in the New York Daily News, all of which are negative. We encourage this sort of behavior, and the professionals responsible for our children are anything but professional.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
10:36 PM on 11/07/2011
A great solution to this problem is to get your daughter into sports. Sports builds confidence and creates friendships. Sports insulates girls from bullying and strengthens them so they can take it when and if it happens. My daughter has taken up Lacrosse and she loves it. She also know I am there for her anytime.
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LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
08:10 AM on 11/08/2011
Did sports insulate boys from anything regarding Penn State?

How about the BSof A? Are they immune from predators because they have learned "survival skills and or self-confidence"? I don't think so.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
05:46 PM on 11/09/2011
Are you denying sports are good for girls. Are you really doing that in order to make your snarky comment?
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Dede Eagleburger
Beauty is in the eye of the makeup brush holder
08:16 AM on 11/08/2011
You are so right!! Sports helped me, and it has for a lot of other girls, too. And it builds good exercise habits for life, too!!
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thereisonlyoneparty
more amazing than you
10:36 PM on 11/07/2011
This is more a problem of law not adapting to changing views of sex. Sending photos of one's genitals and calling someone "gay or lesbian in a negative way" (likely the f-word and d-word) are not as meaningful as they once were. That is just a change in the way that people socialize. It is largely cultural. Sex is not more prevalent than it was in the past--your grandmother f-worded and discussed s'ing d with her friends and so did her grandmother--but it is better represented by the media*. People see realistic discussions and simulations and whatever else about socialization between and within sexes. even youth. And they have more opportunity to openly engage in interactions of a sexual nature. *Sex was rather prevalent in olden time media as well. Just look at Shakespeare. There are constant references to engaging in such acts and rather frank statements about characters sexual moralities (Shakespearian characters are not above calling others w-people). Sexual harassment by today's standards, but less of a problem because we do not get the references.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
10:25 PM on 11/07/2011
I just don't think a person can be sexually harassed in a text.
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LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
08:11 AM on 11/08/2011
Think harder.
psridgell
secession is the solution
07:23 PM on 11/07/2011
Forget schools and get educated online, and then you can sexually harass yourselves.
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dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
06:51 PM on 11/07/2011
I'm not sure what the correct term is for such misbehavior between peers, but it's not ...

"sexual harassment Function: noun : employment discrimination consisting of unwelcome verbal or physical conduct directed at an employee because of his or her sex; also : the tort of engaging in such discrimination"

Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law. Merriam-Webster, Inc. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/sexual harassment (accessed: November 07, 2011).
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sydneymoon
Dismiss what insults your own soul - WW
06:57 AM on 11/08/2011
But it could be
".... intimidation, bullying or coercion of a sexual nature, or the unwelcome or inappropriate promise of rewards in exchange for sexual favors.[1]'

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_harassment
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Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
09:31 AM on 11/08/2011
Sorry his dictionary reference is a lot more credible then your wikipedia one.
Next time you cite something you need to use an actual credible website as opposed to one that anyone can change anything on.