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26% of Male Students Think Their University Does ‘Too Much’ To Tackle Misogyny
from ISSUE 1528
by Redbrick
Daisy Roberts News Writer
Content Warning: Mentions of Misogyny and Sexual Assault
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According to a new Savanta survey of 1,600 university students aged 18-25, 26% of male students think their university does ‘too much’ to tackle misogyny. The survey, commissioned by Sophia Smith Galer, journalist and author of ‘Losing It’, revealed shocking figures which, according to Smith Galer, comes down to a lack of sex education for adolescents from primary school up to university.
Named by Smith Galer as a ‘lost generation’, university students, she believes, are showing the effects of a failed sex education system. 52% of current university students claim they had no regular conversations with their parents about sex growing up. It is thought that the lack of a successful sex education system to rely upon, has left, university students severely lacking in education and healthy sexual experiences.
The survey shows that 45% of university-aged men and 31% of university-aged women felt confident labelling the ‘nubis’ on a diagram of the female reproductive system, a statistic that is shocking given the fact that the ‘nubis’ does not exist.
It is thought that Universities are also failing to give their students the education they need. One effect of this can be seen in the lack of support services made known to university students. Despite being more likely to fall victim to sexual harassment, it was revealed that only 52% of female students versus 70% of male students knew how to report it.
Sarah Champion, a British Labour MP who had a big influence in the introduction of mandatory sex education in 2017, weighed in on these findings. Champion said how the figures ‘paint a clear picture of the shock- ing gaps in children and young people’s knowledge about sex, relationships and their own bodies’. Champion said that the fundamentals of sex education should be taught ‘long before’ students reach university, and that this failure is actually putting students ‘at risk’. cation. healthy conversations that UoB is not actively trying to have.
To investigate further, Redbrick spoke to Emmanuelle Cuccolo, a teacher of 15 years and a second year student studying for a Masters in Research in Sexuality and Gender Studies.
According to Cuccolo, sex education which, ‘teaches you how to be human’, is not being properly addressed by the University of Birmingham.
This ‘risk’ is certainly evident in some of the experiences reported by Smith Galer. Around 40% of students reported feeling pressured into their first experience of penetrative sex, and 34% of female students believed that their sexual partner did not fully understand what ‘consent’ meant. These two statistics alone show the danger that some students are in as a consequence of a lack of sex edu-
When asked by Redbrick whether she thought UoB does enough to tackle misogyny, Cuccolo’s instant response was a definitive ‘no’. Cuccolo elaborated saying, ‘They [UoB] don’t take any opportunity to actively engage students in a conversation’.
This, in Cuccolo’s opinion, included the University’s ‘on paper’ attempts to reach out to students with their ‘Not On’ campaign, a campaign launched in 2015 to raise awareness about sexual harassment.
‘Misogyny comes out of ignorance’, said Cuccolo, something which can only be improved by
Cuccolo also brought attention to the disparity between international and home students. Having run 2-hour consent workshops out of her own initiative in the Spring and Autumn of the last academic year, Cuccolo saw this division first-hand. She said how she noticed that the majority of students attending the workshops were international students who claimed they had ‘never received any sex education in their life’.
Cuccolo said how international students at university, as well as groups like the LGBTQ+ community, are all being left out of the limited sex education available to students.
Redbrick reached out to the University of Birmingham for comment, however, they have not responded.