Nearly one in four female undergraduates has experienced some type of sexual assault – meaning they were penetrated or touched in a sexual way without their consent – according to a new study. Freshman women are most likely to be victims.
Just over 23 percent of female undergraduate
students reported that they had been sexually assaulted since enrolling in
college, of which 10.8 percent said they have been raped, meaning they
experienced penetration. The poll, which surveyed students at 27 nationally
known universities, was conducted for the Association of American Universities
(AAU) by Westat, a statistical research corporation.
Overall, 11.7 percent of students surveyed
reported having experienced nonconsensual penetration or sexual touching by
force or incapacitation since beginning college. Rates of sexual assault and
misconduct were highest among undergraduate females and those identifying as
TGQN (Transgender, Genderqueer or non-conforming, Questioning, Not Listed), AAU
found. The risk of the most serious types of sexual assault declined during the
college years, with 16.9 percent of female freshmen reporting being assaulted,
as opposed to 11.1 percent of seniors.
“Students who are relatively new to school
may experience higher risk because they are not as familiar with situations
that may lead to an incident of sexual assault or misconduct,” AAU noted
in its findings.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the
Washington Post last week that the number of students who experience sexual
assault on campus has been “unacceptably high” for decades.
“It is shockingly bad, but it is the truth,” Duncan
said. “It’s just like gun violence. I’m shocked every day at the level of
gun violence in this country. But it’s the truth. We can either hide from that
reality, or not.”
Moreover, reporting rates of sexual assaults
occurring in college are low. Overall, only between 5 and 28 percent of such
incidents are reported, depending on the campus.
“When students were asked why they did not
report incidents of sexual assault and sexual misconduct, the most common
reason was that it was not considered serious enough,” the report found. “Other
reasons included because they were ‘embarrassed, ashamed or that it would be
too emotionally difficult,’ and because they ‘did not think anything would be
done about it’.”
Last May, the US Department of Education
announced it was investigating 55 US colleges and universities in connection
with allegations that they mishandled or ignored sexual assault and sexual
harassment complaints.
Of the 26 AAU members who participated in the
survey, seven are under investigation by the Department of Education: Harvard,
Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, North Carolina, Southern California and
North Carolina. Dartmouth is both under investigation and participated in the
AAU survey as a non-member. An additional 10 members are under investigation,
but chose not to participate: Berkeley, Boston University, Carnegie Mellon,
Colorado, Emory, Indiana, Penn State, Princeton, University of Chicago and
Vanderbilt.
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