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On Thursday, December 6, 2018, from 2-4 p.m. the Global Women’s Institute and Department for International Development are hosting an event, “What Works To Prevent Violence Against Girls,” at the Milken Institute of Public Health.

The event will feature several highly qualified panelists who have researched these issues as they manifest all around the world. The event is being held in recognition of 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence. More information can be found below.

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As we near the end of another semester, our students often need help identifying their next steps, given the significant learning experience they have had. Below are a few suggestions to forward to them.

The November 14th, Conversation on Community-Engaged Scholarship was about gender-based harassment or assault in the context of service sites. Several faculty have recently had students express discomfort from experiencing unwanted attention while at their service-site. This Conversation was intended to be the first of many discussions about how to respond and how to proactively prepare students to feel more comfortable communicating their boundaries, particularly in the context of the service relationship.

The Conversation began with two speakers, who provided resources and responded to questions. Most of the resources shared are available through Haven: https://haven.gwu.edu

Christina Franzino (cfranzino@gwu.edu), is the Assistant Director for Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (Response Coordinator) in GW’s Title IX office. She conducts consultations with students, faculty and staff to inform individuals of available resources both on- and off-campus. Christina can assist individuals with obtaining interim support measures, such as academic support, campus-housing adjustments, and no contact orders. Additionally, Christina manages GW's Sexual Assault Response Consultation (SARC) Team, a 24/7 hotline resource.  https://haven.gwu.edu/about-title-ix-staff

Tamara Washington is GW's Victim Services Specialist. She advocates for and supports persons affected by any form of crime. Ms. Washington’s provides confidential services, helping members of the GW community learn about resources on and off campus, as well as about their rights and reporting options. https://safety.gwu.edu/about-office-victim-services

Both speakers indicated their availability to speak with concerned faculty, or to schedule presentations to classes. They coordinate training for all incoming students but are happy to facilitate a more specific conversation in any of our courses.

Some of the points raised in the subsequent discussion include:

  • Concern about how few GW staff are available to serve the campus population, given the statistic that 1 in 4 college women and 1 in 6 men will experience sexual assault.
    • It was acknowledged that the GW community is experiencing a recent increase in such resources and staffing, but many faculty expressed that more is needed.
  • Concern that many students believe silently accepting harassment is the way to avoid a situation that might escalate.
    • Faculty can and should have a role in discussing with students ways to make their boundaries clear without putting themselves at further risk
  • Gender-based harassment at service sites
    • The importance of strong relationships between faculty and community partners, so conversations about how to respond begin from a place of trust
    • Complexity when the source of harassment is a client of the organization, someone in need of their services. Can this person receive help while being distanced from volunteers? Can the organization staff, who likely know the client better, intervene? What are the options?
    •  It is also helpful to know the gender-based harassment policies of the service-site organization
    • Preparing students to respond to/de-escalate when they are in the context of serving in the community.
    • We emphasize the need to have empathy, patience, and respect for those we serve. We also emphasize the cultural differences that should lead students to expect differences in norms of behavior. These messages need to go alongside messages that students should feel empowered to maintain their own boundaries of comfort. Students may find these to be complex messages to communicate.
    • Training for faculty may be needed, to help them facilitate this discussion in class as a part of other course content that prepares students to enter the community.
  • The need to address the shifting of culture, in addition to responding to individual issues.
    • Training needs to not just focus on how to respond to harassment or assault, but how to help students recognize when they are being perpetrators of unwanted and inappropriate attention
    • At the Honey W. Nashman Center, we have made our goal to address the culture of racism explicit. There is a need at GW to address rape culture in a similar way
    • Opportunities for training and discussion of this culture were considered
      • The Nashman Center’s Institute for Citizen Leaders will include training related to gender-based harassment and assault in future.
      • A discussion of these issues may also occur at Chavez-Huerta-Itliong Day as well
  • Franzino and Washington indicated that they are frequently asked about how to influence culture shifts. They believe some important shaping experience happen long before students arrive at college.
    • Teaching young children that their bodies are their own – that they do not have to hug someone they do not want to. When children say stop tickling, grown-ups should stop.
    • Our students can contribute to this shift in culture is through their own service with children. GW service-learning students often describe discomfort with the way children hug/grip, climb on them. Students can use this teachable moment to demonstrate to children how to communicate about the boundaries they want to have where their own bodies are concerned.
    • Faculty can play a role in removing the taboo on discussing issues of gender and sex.

The Conversation concluded with important clarification on GW’s new policy that includes instructors as “responsible employees,” meaning they have a responsibility to inform the Title IX office whenever they become aware that a member of the GW community has experienced gender-based harassment or assault. The result of this notification is that the student will receive, via email, information about the supports and resources available to them. The student is not required to respond to this email and the perpetrator of the harassment is not contacted (unless there are multiple reports about the same person, indicating the GW community is at risk). It was suggested that having the student be involved when we notify Title IX (or at least letting them know that we are contacting Title IX in order to get information about resources) would help the student feel more comfortable with the process.

The resources shared with students are also available through Haven, https://haven.gwu.edu, and include contact information for medical care, legal support, and reporting information, but most importantly, a trained person to talk to about the experience through the Sexual Assault Response and Consultation Team (SARC).

Wednesday, November 14th, Gelman Library Room 101

We can always learn and develop our knowledge to prevent sexual harassment from arising in any kind of work or social setting. Unfortunately, the University encounters alarming incidents of service learning students receiving unwanted advances from the clients of community organizations the students were serving with. The context of the service relationship makes the problem of sexual harassment particularly challenging. How do we prepare our students and how do we respond?

Christina Franzino, Assistant Director for Sexual Assault Prevention and Response, facilitated the conversation in GW’s Title IX Office.

Please encourage colleagues to join in on future conversations and encourage open, ongoing discussions about how to build a safe space for everyone, regardless of their role.

Please contact titleix@gwu.edu with any concerns or refer to Title IX's training calendar and other resources on their website to find more information about sexual assault, harassment, and prevention efforts.

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The Global Women’s Institute has released their latest newsletter with several events to save the date for in the coming weeks. The first is an event on violence against women in the Americas. This event will focus on new evidence from the Americas around what it takes to bring down levels of violence.

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The next event is a screening of the movie Girl Rising, which will take place on November 12th in Room 219 of Gelman Library from 7 to 9 p.m. For RSVP and more info, click here. Last year, we interviewed Knapp Fellow Gayatri Malhotra on her project with Girl Rising India. You can check that out here.

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Lastly, the Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Program is hosting their Annual Yulee Lecture Symposium: Feminist Theory In and Beyond the Academy on November 15th. The lecture will explore the power of feminist theories to shape culture and society with three guest speakers. Click here to register.

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Shared by the King Week Planning Committee:

The King Week Planning Committee invites departments, student organizations, faculty, staff, alumni, and individual students to honor Dr. King's legacy of diversity and inclusion through action.  Our community has the opportunity, and the responsibility to pay homage to his legacy. Therefore, you are invited to submit proposals for programs and activities in support of our university-wide community celebration of Dr. King's life.

Programs and activities may include:

  • Presentations
  • Workshops
  • Papers
  • Research
  • Panel discussions
  • Lectures
  • Artistic presentations/displays (spoken word, performances, documentaries)
  • Other expressions of campus diversity, solidarity, and social justice are welcomed.

The criteria for programs and activities should reflect the George Washington University Statement on Diversity and Inclusion.

Proposals should be submitted to go.gwu.edu/KingWeekRFP by Wednesday, November 14, 2018. Notifications of proposal requests will be sent by Wednesday, November 21, 2018.

If you have any questions, please email kingweek@gwu.edu.

Washington Monthly ranked GW one of America’s best colleges for voting. The rankings were decided based on a variety of metrics-one of places that GW scored well was that the institution encourages students to vote. You can see the full article (as well as the other civically active and not-so active universities here: https://washingtonmonthly.com/magazine/september-october-2018/americas-best-colleges-for-student-voting/)09

The 2019 Nashman Faculty Learning Communities (FLC) are forming now. These small inter-disciplinary/inter-professional groups meet monthly for one year to discuss and learn collectively about their topic of interest. All GW faculty and administrators are welcome. Click here for information about other FLC's forming for 2019.

Chair: Leslie Jacobson (Theatre)

We would like to invite Faculty from across all disciplines and programs to join a Faculty Learning Community that will explore the many ways we might collaborate and engage with each other to build a vibrant multi-disciplinary arts community within GW, and to discern how to engage meaningfully with communities beyond the university.

Of particular interest will be the differentiation between “community outreach” and “community engagement.” What does engagement look like in arts scholarship and practice? How can we engage with our partners in ways that honor the goals of reciprocity, mutually beneficial partnerships, and epistemic justice?

Collectively, this group will identify and discuss relevant texts and examples of community-engaged arts. Members will share their successes, challenges, paths, and barriers.

The purpose of this FLC is to:

  • build a sense of community among the community-engaged faculty across GW’s arts disciplines;
  • stimulate challenging conversations about what quality community engagement looks like across the arts; and
  • create a final deliverable, defined by the group,  that helps to pave the way for more high quality community-engaged scholarship and practice in GW’s arts programs.

The FLC will convene monthly through December 2019 and will involve moderate preparation for our meetings.

To indicate your interest in this group, please email Wendy Wagner (wagnerw@gwu.edu).

The 2019 Nashman Faculty Learning Communities (FLC) are forming now. These small inter-disciplinary/inter-professional groups meet monthly for one year to discuss and learn collectively about their topic of interest. All GW faculty and administrators are welcome. Click here for information about other FLC's forming for 2019.

Chair: Maranda Ward, Clinical Research and Leadership

We would like to invite Faculty from across all disciplines and programs to join a Faculty Learning Community that will explore community-engaged scholarship in the context of online courses. This discussion will include a review of the literature on course design for online service-learning, relationship building and reciprocity with community partners in this context, and other factors that make these courses unique. There IS literature on community-engaged online courses, and we will explore it together.

Collectively, this group will identify and discuss relevant texts and examples of this work. Members will share their successes, challenges, paths, and barriers.

The purpose of this FLC is to:

  • build a sense of community among the community-engaged faculty across GW
  • stimulate challenging conversations about what quality community engagement looks like in the online course environment
  • create a final deliverable, defined by the group,  that helps to pave the way for more high quality community-engaged scholarship and practice at GW

The FLC will convene monthly through December 2019 and will involve moderate preparation for our meetings.

To indicate your interest in this group, please email Wendy Wagner (wagnerw@gwu.edu).

The 2019 Nashman Faculty Learning Communities (FLC) are forming now. These small inter-disciplinary/inter-professional groups meet monthly for one year to discuss and learn collectively about their topic of interest. All GW faculty and administrators are welcome. Click here for information about other FLC's forming for 2019.

Chair: Imani M. Cheers, School of Media and Public Affairs

We would like to invite faculty from across all disciplines and programs to join a Faculty Learning Community that will explore a variety of forms of storytelling available to scholars. Digital Storytelling has been employed as a powerful reflection tool for students. It has also used in community advocacy work. PhotoVoice is a qualitative research method, increasingly popular among researchers who use community-based participatory methods.

Collectively, this group will identify and discuss relevant texts and examples of this work. Members will share their successes, challenges, paths, and barriers.

The purpose of this FLC is to:

  • build a sense of community among the community-engaged faculty across GW
  • stimulate challenging conversations about quality community engagement and the tools available to help us achieve it
  • create a final deliverable, defined by the group,  that helps to pave the way for more high quality community-engaged scholarship and practice at GW

The FLC will convene monthly through December 2019 and will involve moderate preparation for our meetings.

To indicate your interest in this group, please email Wendy Wagner (wagnerw@gwu.edu).

This book talk with Dr. Reyes examines how colleges shape the political identity of Latino students. Hosted by the Cisneros Institute at GWU and open to all students and faculty. Don’t miss this discussion!

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The Julian Clement Chase Prize, which has been awarded by GW’s Writing Department since 2016, was featured in a recent article in the Washington Post. One of the winners named, Xavier Adomatis, is a Civic House student and was recognized for his paper, “Re-Segregate D.C. Schools: An analysis of gentrification’s peculiar consequences on Francis-Stevens.” For more information about Julian Clement Chase and the prize, check out the full article here.

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Washington Monthly has named GW among their best colleges for student voting in their September/October 2018 issue. Their publication, according to them, is the only one that takes into account civic engagement as part of their overall college rankings. They have done so since 2005.

They have chosen to highlight the top 58 schools that received a 4/4 rating for civic engagement. You can read the full article here and check out the full list of schools below.

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GW Votes and the Party at the Mailbox, which was an event to help students mail their absentee ballots, was featured recently on USA Today in their article highlighting groups targeting college students to vote in the midterm elections. Check out the full article here.