Sexual Harassment Training Classes
In our Sexual Harassment Awareness
training classes your employees will learn and apply
the important skills of handling sexual harassment issues
and complaints. This hands on class thoroughly addresses
the elements of how to
prevent unacceptable
behavior. The class includes a detailed
overview of what sexual
harassment is, explains legal definitions, discusses sexual
harassment prevention, and shows how to handle sexual
harassment complaints and maintain a positive work
environment.
For more information about individual sexual harassment
training classes please complete
this form. Once the form is received one of our
consultants will provide you with a confidential proposal
that will include a detailed description of the training
class and the costs for conducting it.
Sexual Harassment Training:
Male-on-Male Sex Harassment Complaints Escalating
The Gender Public Advocacy Coalition (GenderPAC) states that Equal Employment Opportunity Commission statistics show that the reporting of male-on-male sexual harassment in a hostile work environment is on the rise. Claims filed by men accounted for 15% of all complaints in 2003, up from nine percent in 1992. According to the EEOC, an overwhelming majority of the almost 2,000 new claims made by men were male-on-male sexual harassment.
Male-on-male sexual harassment includes bullying that utilizes sexual taunts, simulated sex acts, feminine pronouns, and threats of sexual aggression. Like locker room bullying, workplace harassment usually is directed at a less aggressive coworker or subordinate employee. Its purpose is to humiliate and undermine respect for the victim by putting him in a feminine that publicly challenges his masculinity.
"The locker room culture has no place in the workplace today," states Riki Wilchins, executive director of GenderPAC. "More and more corporations are recognizing that and are expanding their nondiscrimination policies, harassment training programs and providing their employees with effective sexual harassment training courses and workshops. We are at the beginning of changing long-held attitudes and behaviors that are harmful to men and women by conducting a class or course in sex harassment."
Major employers recently have found themselves facing expensive lawsuits involving male-on-male sexual harassment. For instance, Babies 'R Us paid a $205,000 settlement to a male employee who said he was made the target of derogatory comments by other men. In another case in Washington state, a former waiter said he was called by feminine pronouns, mocked by his manager for the way he walked, and taunted with sexual epithets because he refused to have sex with a female coworker. Such claims barely existed until the Supreme Court ruled in 1989 in Oncale v. Sundowner that victims of male-on-male sexual harassment could sue under Federal law.
It remains difficult to determine exactly how many of the claims filed as male sexual harassment are actually male-on-male, since the EEOC only tracks the sex of the victim. "We call on the EEOC to start tracking both the sex of the victim and the alleged harasser to make these figures more meaningful and useful to employers," demands by providing workplace harassment training seminars and classes. A harassment training course or seminar can be effective in stemming this type of insidious, demeaning behaviour.
Source: Society For The
Advancement of Education
Link