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. . Peer Education Program. Program structureProfessional support from Training
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1. Program Evaluation and Ongoing Development: SAPACs First-Year Workshops Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC)
Dr. Johanna Soet, Lauren Sogor
Sasha Achen
2. Peer Education Program Program structure
Professional support from Training & Education Coordinator and Director
Leadership from two student staff coordinators
Volunteer presenters
Volunteer Training
32 hours of training, 16 hours of Peer Education-specific training
Weekly meetings with ongoing education
Presentation topics
Sexual assault, dating/domestic violence, sexual harassment, cultural acceptance of sexual violence
3. Program Statistics
4. Consent is Sexy: Workshop Content Consent and coercion
Alcohol and other date rape drugs
Risk reduction and prevention
Proactive bystander
Supporting survivors
Resources
Trivia game
5. Goals of Data Project Guide annual program revisions
Help focus new workshop development
Encourage participants reflection on presented material
Allow evaluation of presenters
Ensure audiences are representative of the UM population
6. Survey Design Pre/Post Tests
A/B alternating format
Demographic information
Likert scale attitudinal questions
Factual questions
Open-ended questions (new design)
Causes of sexual violence
Role in prevention
Post-Test Only: program satisfaction
7. Weaknesses Do changes last?
Are responses honest?
Cannot track individual changes
Detracts from presentation
Sample is not random
No generalizations to UofM population
Cannot compare base attitudes or effectiveness over time
Small sample size limits statistical significance
8. Results-Demographics
9. Race changing compositions
10. Attitudinal Statements
Sex with someone who is intoxicated but still conscious can be considered sexual assault. (T)
Pressuring someone to have sex should be considered a sexual assault. (T)
A sexual situation is not legally considered a sexual assault until one person says no.(F)
Women who are sexually assaulted at a party where that sort of thing is known to happen share some responsibility for the assault. (F)
People often label regretted sex sexual assault because they dont want to take responsibility for their actions. (F)
Use of drugs and/or alcohol is often the reason that people commit sexual assault. (F)
11. Attitudes - Results
12. Factual Questions: Date Rape Drugs
13. Causes of Sexual Assault
14. Role in Prevention Logits
15. Presentation Satisfaction 58% mention learning a statistic or enjoying the statistics
16% mention liking the speakers; 1% mentioned disliking them
The statistics that respondents most commonly reported learning were the modal age of reported male victims of sexual assault (17%) and the fraction of sexual assaults that are reported (13%)
The most common complaint was that the presentation is too long (9%)
8% complained about the programs logistics
5% of respondents reported learning nothing from the presentation; 6% reported liking everything about it
16. Content Changes for Next Year Alcohol
Difference between tool and cause
Causality problem
Statistics stay!
Time
Make sure residents arrive on time and workshops start on time
Workshops run 45 minutes start to finish
Delete the coercion continuum activity
Logistics
Change the room?
Change the day / time?
More workshops?
Single-sex or co-ed presentations?
17. Methodology Changes for Next Year Change to closed-ended race question with UM categories?
Make cause / prevention questions closed-ended?
Pro: Fuller picture of respondents ideas
Non-response rates for cause / prevention are about 15%, but < 1% for the Likert scale questions
Those who do respond may only have the energy to mention the idea that is most important to them
Con: May lose sense of relative salience
Harder to measure the intensity of beliefs
Priming
Practical Concern: Saves considerable staff time
Possible implementations: ranking, Likert scale, check all that apply
18. Why Have a Student-Run Evaluation Mechanism? SAPACs PE program is led by students, comprised of students, and implemented for students
Student staff members are in charge of making changes in workshop content for the following year
Program evaluation of student organizations provides meaningful but manageable research opportunities to students
Allowing students to use skills from statistics and the social sciences to evaluate their own programs gives students a sense of the relevance of their coursework and agency in their organizations
Consistent with the current culture work in DSA around leveling the work
19. Any Questions?