Women’s Center hosts GV’s first Rape Aggression Defense Seminar
Seminar hopes to empower women through education, awareness
On Jan. 11, the Grand Valley State University Women’s Center will host the first Rape Aggression Defense Seminar of the winter semester. The self-defense seminar is three hours long and is “designed to empower women through self-awareness and basic fundamentals of prevention and self defense,” according to the Women’s Center website.
A one-credit course is also offered, allowing students to engage in the material over the course of a semester instead of in the shorter three-hour seminar.
The seminars and courses will be taught by Grand Valley Police Department officers who are certified RAD instructors, and includes lecture along with self-defense techniques, a combination meant to educate and empower students.
“RAD is an internationally recognized training program that provides short-term self-defense training and education, and it’s the largest network of its kind,” said Theresa Rowland, the Violence Against Women Grant Coordinator for the Women’s Center. “With a focus on self-confidence and assertiveness skills, the program … includes education and basic information around awareness, preventions, risk reduction and personal growth.”
Along with self-awareness, prevention and risk reduction, the RAD program provides physical defense techniques based on the most frequent attack scenarios. Participants will be able to “engage in basic hands-on defense without playing the role of the aggressor,” Rowland said.
This program is different from other self-defense and martial arts courses, educating in prevention as well as defense.
“While martial arts have significant self-defense applications, self-defense programs like RAD present physical techniques as options rather than specific responses to specific attacks,” Rowland said. “This program is designed for women, and exposes them to self-defense techniques and information about crimes that take place on campus.”
Though this is a self-defense seminar, the focus is also on the mental state of women on campus and in society today, pushing away the “blame the victim” mentality that often creeps into sexual assault cases, and educating participants about the reality of sexual assaults versus common myths.
“As a culture, rape myths are widely accepted,” Rowland said. “Many individuals hold misconceptions about sexual assaults, and knowledge of the facts is essential to prevent sexual assault on campus.”
The program hopes to educate women that assaults will occur, and often there is nothing that could be done about it. This is not always the response from women who experience these attacks.
“While risk reduction and safety education efforts provide personal empowerment, knowledge and skills – we know that these efforts alone cannot keep someone from being sexually assaulted,” Rowland said. “Continually addressing sexual assault as something that could be prevented – ‘if only the victim had done (blank)’ – versus focusing on the realities that make perpetrators motivated and able to commit these heinous crimes is a problem.”
The program also wants to emphasize the fact that assault victims often know their attackers.
Nearly 70 percent of women who were assaulted on college campuses knew the offender, according to a 2009 study performed by the U.S. Department of Justice, and a U.S. Department of Justice study from 2000 showed nearly 90 percent. A National Crime Victimization survey in 2009 showed that only 21 percent of assault victims were attacked by someone they did not know.
The fact that some women do not know their attackers needs to “be balanced … with information that rightly informs women that they need to be most worried about people they know,” Rowland said. “Images of sexual assault by a stranger saturate our cultural consciousness of sexual violence, but more women know who their perpetrators are – acquaintances, friends, co-workers, neighbors, dating partners, family members, etc.”
This program is meant to not only give participants a sense of empowerment, but to educate them about on-campus attacks, how to prevent them, and techniques for risk reduction.
“In instances of sexual assault, GVSU feels strongly that emphasis should be on the prevention of sexual assault, not just ways that women can reduce risk,” Rowland said. “Therefore, in addition to educational efforts and services that enhance risk reduction, we try to equally focus prevention efforts around social norms and behaviors of perpetrators.
The RAD seminar hopes that women who participate will walk away more knowledgeable and more empowered, and that they will carry that with them in their daily lives.
“Not only will participants learn more about sexual assault and other crimes that take place on campus, they will gain knowledge and skills that can be used in their personal lives,” Rowland said.
The seminar is offered several times throughout the semester. The first one will be held on Jan. 11 in the Kirkhof Center, room 2263 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Students can learn more and register for the seminar at www.gvsu.edu/womens_cen, and can register for the Self Defense for Women course, PED 100, on their myBanner page. Any student with additional questions can contact the Women’s Center at (616) 331-2748 or womenctr@gvsu.edu.
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Pictures of the Year 2012-2013


Courtesy Photo/Joe Kargula and Erik Peterson run the Marathon leg of the Ironman Triathlon

GVL / Robert Mathews Quarterback Heath Parling (12) leading the offense past Notre Dame College.

GVL / Eric Coulter Senior Jake Isaacson placed eigth in the Spartan Invitational. Isaacson's time of 25:04 was the highest among Division II athletes.

GVL/Jessica Hollenbeck Student Senate President Jack Iott speaks to the assembly during Thursday's meeting.

Courtesy / gvsu.edu President Haas and Montcalm Community College President Robert C. Ferrentino sign the transfer agreement


Courtesy Photo/ GVSU Athletic Department Sophomore Chris Cunningham lines up a putt at a past match.

Courtesy Photo / GVSULakers.com Andrew Darrell prepares to return the serve earlier this season.

GVL / Jessica Hollenbeck President Haas cooks pancakes during Family Weekend's "Pancakes with Presidents".

GVL / Jessica Hollenbeck President Haas cooks pancakes during Family Weekend's "Pancakes with Presidents".

GVL / Archive Forward Briauna Taylor (31) chases down a lose ball in a game last season

Courtesy Photo / Dean Breest Sophomore Allyson Winchester was named the GLIAC Women's Cross Country Athlete of the Year after finishing first with a time of 20:48.8.

GVL / Archive GVSU's Breland Hogan rises and fires over three defenders last season.

GVL/Bo Anderson Briauna Taylor leads the fast break during a game earlier this season.

GVL / Robert Mathews Associate Vice President for Facilities Planning, James Moyer, leading a walk through of the Mary Ideam Pew Library

Courtesy Photo / GVSU DII Men's Hockey Jeremy Christopher chases down a puck during a matchup last season.

GVL / Bo Anderson Students and faculty danced under the spectacular light show in the Devos Place Ballroom

GVL / Robert Mathews Martin L�wenberg, holocaust survivor, speaking at the Genocide Awareness Night presentation in the Grand River Room.

Courtesy / Dean Breest Senior Sam Lockhart finishes her indoor career with two individual national championships in weight throw and shot put at the 2013 National Championships.

Archive / Robert Mathews Giancarlo Brugnoni (40) rounding the bases during a previous game.

GVL/Bo Anderson Seniors Christ Koppenaal, Bill Madsen, and Mitch Weber measure the exterior of the Wesley House as part of an energy audit.

GVL / Robert Mathews Senior Anthony Campanella pitching against Tiffin University during the Lakers double header.

GVL / Eric Coulter Brother Jed Smock, a member of Campus Ministry USA, speaks with fervor to a student. Many students, all with differing views, came to watch the Campus Ministry members speak.

GVL / Sean Mouton A passing walker stops to admire some recently constructed pieces of Art Prize 2012.

GVL Archive Senior Nick Gunthorpe follows through and watches his shot at the Ardenson last year. This weekend the team will be playing in South Haven.

GVL / Bo Anderson GVSU's Katie Martin points to her teammate after safely reaching second base.

GVL / Robert Mathews Mary Idema Pew Library Learning and Information Commons under construction.

GVL / Archive The Grand Valley Rowing Team during Spring Training in Florida last spring.

GVL / Robert Mathews Judge Glenda Hatchett, keynote guest for Monday's King celebration, speaks in the Grand River Room in Kirkhof.

GVL / Robert Mathews Judge Glenda Hatchett, keynote guest for Monday's King celebration, speaks in the Grand River Room in Kirkhof.
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