Students Teach Workshops on Sexual Consent
Twelve USF students spent the fall semester teaching their peers in club sports and Greek life how to recognize, prevent, and respond to sexual violence.
Sponsored by USF’s Title IX Office and Active Consent, a consent-education group, the peer-led workshops are now mandatory for club sports teams and Greek life participants.
In August, USF brought the Active Consent team to campus for two days of training. A dozen student volunteers stepped up and learned the 90-minute workshop curriculum. Since then, the students have led 12 workshops for student organizations across campus, and expect to lead 10 to 15 more in the spring semester.
“The Active Consent workshops have been such an important part of the work we do,” said second-year nursing student Piper O’Bryan ’28, a workshop leader and volunteer with the Resources, Education, Prevention, and Support (REPS) team from the Title IX office on campus. “I believe all students should have access to information and resources to make healthy, empowering, and autonomous choices.”
Katrina Garry, the deputy Title IX coordinator at USF who conducts Title IX training for all of USF’s NCAA teams, resident advisers, tutors, ROTC members, student admissions officers, and chartered student organization executives, said she hopes these Active Consent workshops are only the beginning.
“It was just me when I started here at USF, and now the Title IX office consists of myself and four interns,” Garry said. “We have a REPS advisory board that consists of 10 students, and we have 12 volunteers who are trained to lead peer workshops.”