Sexual Harassment Training Workshops
In our Sexual Harassment Awareness
training workshops your employees will learn and apply
the important skills of handling sexual harassment issues
and complaints. This hands on workshop thoroughly addresses
the elements of how to
prevent unacceptable
behavior. The workshop 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 workshops 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
workshop and the costs for conducting it.
Sexual Harassment Training:
Workplace Harassment, Bullying and Sexual Harassment
Can Cause High Turnover
What is one of the most insidious and destructive problems, yet also one of the least documented and most tolerated?
Answer: Workplace bullying and
sex harassment.
The problem often surfaces in a hostile work environment such behavioral forms as verbal abuse,
sexual harassment and discrimination. But bullying is a subsurface problem in many organizations, causing stress-related illnesses, turnover, defective work, stifled creativity and, for its targets, shattered careers. It is a problem that knows no geographic boundaries and is not confined to a particular industry.
In December 1992, Tim Field was a customer services specialist for a United Kingdom-based software development company. His department manager was known as an excellent "people person" and team builder, and working life was good for everyone in his charge.
Things turned upside down that month when the department manager resigned suddenly and unexpectedly and was replaced with "Mr. Hyde." By the following spring, department morale had sagged due to the new manager's autocratic and biased style of management. Field bore the brunt of the abuse. "Within days of the manager's arrival, criticism had replaced compliments, achievements were undermined, requests were denied and decisions overruled," says Field. "My responsibility increased in the department, yet authority was taken away from me. I could never pin him down to an explanation about what was wrong and, when challenged, he would become impatient, aggressive and often made veiled threats of demotion."
Later that year, Field suffered a psychiatric injury from the accumulation of verbal abuse and piling on of job responsibilities, which had tripled since the manager's arrival. He quit shortly afterward.
As Field later learned by studying literature on harassment, discrimination and bullying, and by conducting his own research at U.K. workplaces, he had been the target of a workplace bully who knew how to exploit a vulnerable organization. The company conferred unbridled authority on its supervisors, lacked a
sex harassment training
workshop or
class or an anti-intimidation policy, had no dispute resolution or effective employee-grievance process and was clueless about the characteristic behaviors of a workplace bully. Absent company
harassment training
seminars or
courses, Field's unfortunate encounter was an episode waiting to happen.
But his experience is not unique or even rare. According to a 1996 study by the International Labor Organization (ILO), 53 percent of U.K. employees were targets of workplace bullying and 78 percent were witnesses. High-prevalence statistics for bullying and sex harassment were produced for other countries, too. Today, Field helps employers and targets of workplace bullying through the U.K. National Workplace Bullying Advice Line, which he founded in 1996. In retrospect, Field believes the bullying manager he knew was a "socialized psychopath," a profile he says applies to most workplace bullies.
What Is Workplace Bullying?
Workplace bullies exhibit a variety of behaviors that fall under the rubric of "low-level violence." Workplace bullying is commonly thought of as
workplace harassment, emotional abuse and targeted aggression. Bullying and
sex harassment follow a pattern of behavior and is not an isolated incident.
Examples of bullying and
sex harassment behaviors are:
* Yelling at or ridiculing a co-worker or subordinate publicly for disagreeing, while exhibiting stony silence in private.
* Undermining an individual or group with vindictive or humiliating words or acts.
* Stalking and other forms of intimidation.
* And, as it applies to males more than females, an implied threat of physical attack, especially in blue-collar environments.
In supervisor-subordinate relationships, bullying and
sex harassment may include excessive dumping of work or assignment of unpleasant jobs.
"The typical recipe for workplace bullying and
sex harassment includes cutthroat competition with a scarcity of talent and time, along with a fear-laced culture," says Gary Namie, coordinator of the non-profit organization Campaign Against Workplace Bullying and
Sexual Harassment, headquartered in Benicia, Calif.
"Complaining is equated with whining or weakness and may be taboo. So, there's denial and no responsibility for the problem. If a manager says, 'Work out the interpersonal conflict between yourselves because I don't want to get involved,' that is a green light for the bully. A lot of times, this is how it's played out in a polite, well-dressed office. And bullying happens most often in a workplace that's continually in crisis mode and that doesn’t provide a
harassment training program
seminar or
course."
Bullying seldom boils into an open confrontation, and without
workplace harassment training
workshops or
classes victims and witnesses are typically cowed into silence, according to conflict experts. Because visible evidence of the problem is often scant, it can appear as though the bully's target is creating the problem.
"Once someone does muster the courage to complain, the entire force of the organization may bear down on him, resulting in adversity from two directions instead of just one," says Namie. "If you go out on workers' compensation, you're written off as delusional, since stress disorders are not well-understood as biological illnesses. You are also likely to come out of psychological testing
classes as paranoid. I hate to see people leave their jobs, but sooner or later people have to make a decision to choose their health over their work."
Source:
Rudy M. Yandrick Link