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Hazing

Hazing. Learning Topics. Understand its importance Know its definition Learn some facts Know what to look for How to report it Know possible outcomes Know who is targeted Understand your responsibility. Introduction.

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Hazing

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  1. Hazing

  2. Learning Topics • Understand its importance • Know its definition • Learn some facts • Know what to look for • How to report it • Know possible outcomes • Know who is targeted • Understand your responsibility

  3. Introduction • Hazing is an often unseen and serious problem that can undermine the value of the experiences you and others have in college and the fleet. It is important to examine these practices explicitly in an attempt to overcome the secrecy that perpetuates them.

  4. No Tolerance • The Navy has ZERO tolerance for hazing.

  5. Definition • Hazing is any activity of someone participating in an activity that humiliates, degrades, abuses, or endangers a person regardless of that person’s willingness to participate.

  6. Not Sure if it is Hazing? • Would I feel comfortable participating in this activity if my senior officers were watching? • Am I being asked to keep these activities a secret? • Am I doing anything illegal? • Does participation violate my values or those of my organization? • Is it causing emotional distress or stress of any kind to myself or others?

  7. Facts • 47% of students come to college already having experienced hazing • 55% of college students involved in clubs, teams and organizations experience hazing • 2 in 5 students say they are aware of hazing taking place on their campus

  8. Facts (cont) • More than 1 in 5 report that they witnessed hazing personally • In 95% of cases where students identified their experience as hazing, they did not report the events to campus officials • 9 out of 10 students who have experienced hazing behavior in college do not consider themselves to have been hazed

  9. What to Look For • Physical distress • Crying • Sadness • Mental distress • Signs of depression • Peer pressure • Unusual behavior

  10. How to Report an Incident • If in a classroom, tell the professor • If on the street, use your judgment, at a minimum, make note of what happened and report it to the police • If in your unit • Tell your chain of command • Advisors

  11. Possible Outcomes • Turmoil • Review board • Extra duties • Disenrollment • Law suits • Injury • Death or Suicide

  12. Who Gets Hazed? • Potentially everyone • Military members • Your sailors and marines • Possibly you • Athletes • Greek life • “The new guy” • Minorities

  13. Your Responsibility • Hazing is everyone’s problem • Understand what hazing is and be able to recognize it • Take responsibility when you encounter it by reporting it immediately • Make others aware of what hazing is and their responsibility for preventing its occurrence

  14. Conclusion • Hazing can cause significant harm to individuals, groups and your organization • The most important thing you can do is report it • Don’t be a bystander

  15. Resources • Cornell • http://hazing.cornell.edu/ • Web Dictionary • http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/hazing • Miami University • http://www.units.muohio.edu/psybersite/groups/hazing.shtml • Hazing Prevention • http://www.hazingprevention.org/hazing-information • Hazing Studying • http://www.hazingstudy.org/index.php

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