Harassment
and Victimization: When RAs are the Target
Submitted
by Leah K. Parker
RAs are
a first point of contact for many students who are harassed and victimized
by their peers. However, few of us take enough time to consider how
the issue can directly impact our RAs until a student staff member becomes
the target. Too often, we either minimize harassment as simply part
of the job or are caught off guard and fail to respond effectively.
This is unfortunate both because it is common for RAs to encounter abuse
and because there are strategies to manage this campus issue. This article
will provide suggestions to address RA victimization before it happens,
to manage the actual incident (or series of incidents), and to follow-up
effectively.
Before
detailing these strategies, it is useful to consider what constitutes
harassment and victimization of student staff. Ultimately, any violation
of school policy and any behavior that you would not tolerate if directed
to a non-staff student should be considered just as unacceptable when
targeting a RA. RAs are often the first staff members to respond to
conflicts, late night incidents, and situations where drugs, including
alcohol, are involved. These realities of the RA position make RAs easy
targets for abuse. Students who are confronted and/or documented may
lash out at the RA staff both during an incident and following one.
Some specific examples of RA harassment and victimization that I experienced
as a RA or was experienced by RAs whom I supervised are:
-
Verbal
abuse including profanity, yelling, and threats
-
Harassment
via malicious emails or postings to websites
-
Door
vandalism including torn decorations, graffiti, super glued doors,
urination, and door decorations being set on fire
-
Residents
indecently exposing themselves
-
Destruction
of RA property including tampering with items left in common areas
and vandalism of a RA’s car
-
Physical
violence – the most common incidents involved pushing and shoving,
but two more serious incidents were a RA being punched and a door
that was rigged to tip a 50 gallon garbage barrel full of water and
trash onto a RA.
I list
these examples to help frame the concept of RA harassment, but want
to stress that they occurred over a series of years and with different
staff members at different institutions. As is the case with many critical
incidents and campus concerns, RA victimization will not impact every
RA, but it will likely impact every staff. As such, it is important
to consider what steps RA supervisors and residence life departments
can take to address RA harassment and victimization.
Preparation
The best
time to consider the issue of RA victimization is before a school year
begins and well before you must deal with an actual incident. The list
below includes key strategies to help you consider this issue and what
you can do proactively to reduce its impact on your staff and its occurrence
on your campus.
-
Know
relevant school policy that covers harassment and victimization and
how it applies to staff. Check your code of conduct, harassment policy,
and any statements on failure to comply or interference with the judicial
process.
-
If
your current policy does not adequately cover your staff, consider
making revisions and/or additions. Specific policies on failure to
comply with a reasonable directive and interference with the judicial
process can be especially helpful in addressing abusive behavior that
staff may encounter while performing their job.
-
Create
policies and procedures with the safety of staff in mind. Require
duty rounds to be completed with partners and create guidelines for
student staff to call in professional staff (residence life and campus
safety) to respond to escalating incidents.
-
Make
it clear that all incidents directed to staff should be reported.
Often staff will hesitate and delay reporting, so it is important
to repeatedly emphasize this expectation to all layers of staff.
-
Discuss
staff harassment during training and make sure that it is covered
in your manual. If your staff complete a “Behind Closed Doors”
activity in training, add a scenario that includes RA harassment.
-
Consider
assessing your staff’s experience with victimization. Creating
a survey that is part of your mid-year and/or year-end evaluations
could provide a more complete understanding of the climate for your
RAs.
Incident
Management
Incidents
of RA harassment and victimization can be anything from a resident who
becomes abusive during a fire alarm, to escalating vandalism to a RA’s
door, and even more. The specific nature of the problem will dictate
the immediate action needed, but the points below will help you form
your response.
-
Acknowledge
the problem and/or warning signs of a problem as soon as possible.
Ask yourself and other staff involved if you are downplaying a concern
or incident because it involves a RA and if you would you react differently
if it targeted a resident.
-
Support
the staff member involved -- even in cases where the RA’s style
may have been a factor, make sure you do not allow this to minimize
the incident or take precedence over the harassment s/he has experienced.
The first priority should be responding to the incident rather than
detailing what the staff member could have done differently.
-
Consider
ways to remove the RA from potentially problematic situations. This
could involve reworking your duty rotation or even re-assigning the
RA to another location in the most extreme cases. If physical safety
is a concern, immediate action must be taken to keep your student
staff member safe.
-
Foster
and encourage support from fellow RAs by incorporating them into the
response. Building staff can do increased rounds, staff from other
buildings can assist with duty, and all staff can work to limit and
reduce gossip.
-
Use
the full extent of your resources and partner with campus safety staff/police
as needed. Provide your RA with all the support and options that you
would offer another student in similar circumstances (options to press
charges, increased campus safety presence, and so on).
-
Meet
with floor residents (as a group or individually) as soon as possible
to review community standards. Carefully consider the best location
and leader for this meeting (or meetings) and the role that the staff
member involved should play.
Follow-up
and Processing
Even after
the initial response and management of a situation, there is still more
work to be done. It is important to see the problem through to resolution
and to process appropriately with those involved. Consider the strategies
below as you work to bring closure to the situation.
-
Continue
to support the RA and make a referral to counseling if needed. Recognize
the full extent of the impact on the RA’s overall wellbeing,
as the experience may affect a RA’s school work, personal life,
and job responsibilities.
-
Move
forward with judicial charges and sanctions as warranted. Evaluate
if there are additional steps needed to fully convey the serious nature
of the incident. For example, it may make sense to have a senior staff
member hear the case, rather than the building RD.
-
Follow
up with other student staff who took on additional responsibilities
and thank them for their support. It is important to frame the additional
work as part of being a team and not as a result of the targeted RA’s
failure to handle a situation.
-
Try
to identify a specific task or project that the targeted RA can take
on and have a positive and successful experience. Encourage the RA
to maintain as much positive contact with his/her residents as possible
through programming and individual interactions.
-
Evaluate
if a follow up meeting with the floor or specific residents is needed
or if a letter should be sent to area residents reaffirming your community
standards.
-
Process
the incident with your professional staff and consider if there are
changes in policy, procedures, or training that would have helped
avoid or better manage the incident.
Due to
the nature of their responsibilities, RAs are especially susceptible
to abuse and mistreatment. Harassment of student staff should never
be minimized, tolerated, or ignored. We trust and train our RAs to live
and work in our communities in a way that our professional staff simply
cannot. This unique position is a terrific leadership opportunity, but
it also puts our student staff at increased risk to be the target of
abuse. Given this reality, professional staff must work purposefully
to reduce such abuse, we must be ready to respond to acts of victimization
quickly and effectively, and we must always care for our staff as well
as we care for all our students.
Work
Consulted and Recommended Resource
Palmer,
Carolyn. Violent Crimes and Other Forms of Victimization in Residence
Halls. North Carolina: College Administration Publications, Inc.,
1993.
About the
Author
Leah worked
in residence life for nine years (in addition to her three years as
a RA). After experiencing harassment as a RA and then seeing some of
her RAs experience abuse, she decided to look further into the issue.
She found Carolyn J. Palmer’s book, Violent Crimes and Other
Forms of Victimization in the Residence Halls, to be very useful
and it inspired her to create a presentation on this topic. Leah is
currently staying at home with her three young children and can be reached
by email at leahkparker@hotmail.com.
|