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LEFT WING LOONS Title: Women Exempted from Forced Sexual Assault Seminars at University Women Exempted from Forced Sexual Assault Seminars at University Posted on February 11, 2015 by Onan Coca Many folks were upset when Columbia University announced that they would be requiring students to take a sexual assault seminar as a condition to receive their diploma. Well, now theyll probably be even more upset because Columbias companion school which happens to be an all-girls school will NOT be requiring their students to take the seminar because
Women dont commit sexual assault. (Which is a TOTAL Crock
) Barnard College, the all-women companion school to Columbia University, has announced that its students will be exempted from mandatory sexual assault education at the school on the grounds that its female student body [doesnt] need it as much as much as Columbia students do. Columbia has been under a harsh spotlight for the past year over its handling of sexual assault. The school is under investigation for possible Title IX violations, and last fall student Emma Sulkowicz attracted national attention when she began carrying a mattress around campus to protest failures in the schools judicial system that allowed her alleged rapist to go unpunished. In response, Columbia has decided to require students to take part in one of five sexual assault education program or else be unable to graduate. The decision was reported Tuesday by The Columbia Daily Spectator, which quotes Barnards Dean for Equity Amy Zavadil. It seemed premature to require something that took a hold on registration or a hold on a diploma, because we didnt feel we had enough information, Zavadil told a meeting of Columbias student government. This non-involvement comes despite the fact that Barnard students have helped to craft Columbias new sexual assault policies. In addition, Barnard is under a federal investigation for potential Title IX violations based on the mishandling of sexual assault, so it is hardly exempt from any problems pertaining to sexual assault at Columbia. Its decision to opt out is unlikely to quiet critics who worry that campus crusades against sexual assault are simply turning into the vilification of men. Barnard student Michela Weihl, who helped create Columbias new policies as part of the group No Red Tape, said Barnards lack of participation had nothing to do with a lack of resources or preparation. The working group was totally ready to provide these workshops for Barnard studentsthat was not the issue, Weihl told the Spectator. [Dean Zavadil] said that if you require people to take classes, theyre not going to learn as well, and she thinks that Barnard students dont need it as much as Columbia students do. Of course, just how distinct Barnards climate is up for debate. The school is right next to Columbia, students can freely enroll in classes at either school, and social life at the two institutions is heavily intertwined. Socially and romantically and academically, students are mixing all the time, Weihl said.
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