1 / 22

How to Initiate a Safe Z one P rogram on Your C ampus

How to Initiate a Safe Z one P rogram on Your C ampus. Joanne Rusnak Tori Torres Misty Moler. Questions for you all. What is your position on campus? What is your idea of a “Safe Zone”? How do you think this could be helpful on your campus? What do you hope to get from this training?.

vienna
Download Presentation

How to Initiate a Safe Z one P rogram on Your C ampus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How to Initiate a Safe Zone Program on Your Campus Joanne Rusnak Tori Torres Misty Moler

  2. Questions for you all • What is your position on campus? • What is your idea of a “Safe Zone”? • How do you think this could be helpful on your campus? • What do you hope to get from this training?

  3. Goals for Today • To explain what a Safe Zone program is • Give you ideas of how to initiate your own • Demonstrate activity that we use during our training (which you are welcome to use!)

  4. What is a Safe Zone Program? • A way to VISIBLY identify members of the campus community who are supportive of LGBTQ students • A way for campus members to let LGBTQ students know that they are safe and supportive • A way to support and retain LGBTQ students at your institutions

  5. What is a Safe Zone Program cont. • Safe Zone programs can be found all over the U.S. at various institutions • It is a “borrowed program” and the key is to make it work for your institution • We modeled ours after UNCC’s

  6. Why have a Safe Zone Program? • Unlike other marginalized populations, it is harder to identify individuals who are supportive • Discrimination exists on our campuses • Approximately 25 percent of lesbian, gay and bisexual students and university employees have been harassed due to their sexual orientation

  7. http://www.nohomophobes.com

  8. Getting Buy-In • Find someone who is supportive and somewhere to ‘house’ the program. • Know your facts- send out a survey to assess climate on campus if numbers are needed • Bottom-up approach was our strategy • VERY low-cost program- besides cost of decals the only other thing necessary is time • Ours is through Student Services, but could also be done through counseling, student life, diversity centers etc.

  9. Obstacles • Discrimination • Tends to be ‘covert’ vs. ‘overt’ • With a bottom up approach- program less likely to be questioned or stalled • Important to have someone with clout to defend the program if necessary

  10. Our Timeline • June 2012- Letter from a student • August 2012- Training with Campus Pride • Sept 2012-December 2012- Wrote manual, developed training and designed/ordered decal • January 2013- 1st Training • Now have 50 Ally’s on our campuses!

  11. What does a Safe Zone Program Need? • Goals • Purpose • Symbol • Manual • Training All of these can be as in depth as needed dependent upon what the goals are at your institution

  12. Goals/Purpose • Levels of Safe Zone’s: • Do you want no training/orientation and just make brochures and stickers available to all who wish to participate? • Do you want one training/orientation session that educates Ally’s? • Do you want on-going training for your Ally’s?

  13. Our Goals • To create, develop, and train faculty, staff and students who can serve as Safe Zone Allies. • To support LGBTQ students, faculty, staff and visitors at Rowan Cabarrus Community College. • To educate the campus community on LGBTQ issues and concerns

  14. Our Purpose • Create a safe environment for LGBTQ students at RCCC • Educate faculty, students, and staff of LGBTQ issues and concerns • To retain LGBTQ students at RCCC • To refer students to appropriate resources • To offer visible support to LGBTQ students

  15. Our Symbol • Want to make sure it’s connected to the LGBTQ community • Make it your own • One of the most important parts of having a Safe Zone!

  16. Developing a Manual and Training • Lots of info out there • Want to consider what the needs are of your institution • Things to consider: • How in-depth do you want the training to be? • What do you want your program to look like? • Where will you ‘house’ this initiative?

  17. Goals of RCCC Training • Raise awareness of LGBTQ issues and concerns • Become familiar with terms • To help Allies understand how homophobia and heterosexism impacts everyone • To help identify resources in the community • To define role as an Ally • Training runs about 3 hours, once a semester

  18. Our Manual • Terminology • Information about homophobia and heterosexism • Statistics and current events • Role of Safe Zone members • Guide of how to be an Ally • Referral Resources • Ally Agreement Form

  19. Ally Agreement Form • Publicly support all students/faculty/staff regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity. • Display my Safe Zone symbol in a visible location to let campus members know that I am an Ally. • Refer students to appropriate resources if the issues presented are outside of my scope of practice. • Speak out against homophobia when I encounter it on campus. • Explore my own prejudices and not impose them on any member of the campus community. • Not try to change or convert anyone because of their sexual orientation/gender identity.

  20. Star Exercise

  21. Questions

  22. Contact Info Joanne Rusnak Joanne.rusnak@rccc.edu 704-216-3613

More Related