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Clemson University Suspends Inquiry into 果冻传媒app官方鈥 Sex Lives
How many times have you had sex in the last three months? Just kidding鈥The Torch doesn鈥檛 want to know. But Clemson University did. last night that the public South Carolina institution asked its students for this deeply personal information and other statistics of their sex lives as part of a mandatory鈥攜es, mandatory鈥斺淭itle IX and Campus SaVE Act education program鈥 run through a third-party site. Understandably, students speaking to Campus Reform felt the details of their sex lives were none of Clemson鈥檚 business.
Schallhorn reports that Clemson attempted to justify its intrusion in an email sent to a student:
鈥淭he questions are a part of the training so that you may get a sense of the behaviors and experiences of other Clemson students,鈥 an email from the university to one student, obtained by Campus Reform, said. 鈥淥ften, students have an exaggerated perception of the behaviors of their peers, so these questions are in hopes of clarifying those misconceptions.鈥
The program, Clemson claims, 鈥渨ill provide [students] with useful information regarding sexual violence and relationships. The course promotes a healthier and safer campus environment.鈥
Those claims were scant comfort to Clemson students who were understandably put off by the program鈥檚 invasive questions, but nonetheless ordered by Clemson to answer them. Another email from the institution noted that 鈥淸f]ailing to complete the requirement will be a violation of the Student Code of Conduct, General Student Regulation 8: Failure to Comply with Official Request.鈥
After what should have been entirely unsurprising negative press, Clemson quickly and apologized 鈥渇or any concern and inconvenience this has caused.鈥 But this stunning invasion of students鈥 privacy never should have happened in the first place. If even a single student was coerced into divulging the details of his or her sex life under threat of punishment, that鈥檚 one too many.
Campus Reform writes that the program 鈥渨as purchased by Clemson through , 鈥榌a] Title IX and Campus SaVE Act education program that combines sexual assault and substance abuse prevention in a comprehensive online training program.鈥欌 Might other colleges be asking their students these same questions? Did nobody stop for a minute and think about the ramifications of and reaction to a government agency (Clemson) ordering its students to divulge to both it and to some third-party vendor how often they engage in sexual activity?
Colleges and universities have serious obligations under Title IX, but there must be some limit to how intrusive universities are willing to be in the name of fulfilling those obligations. We鈥檝e seen that institutions are all too comfortable disregarding the due process rights of students accused of sexual misconduct, and we hope severe invasions of privacy like this are not the next trend, but we鈥檙e worried they might be. After all, surveys like this one are going to become more common now that the White House has recommended campus climate surveys. And CampusClarity advertises itself as a way for colleges to fulfill their statutory obligation to provide 鈥減rimary prevention and awareness programs鈥 under the , billing their program as 鈥渁ddress[ing] the Campus SaVE Act鈥檚 requirements for student training no matter where you鈥檙e located, with custom course versions for all 50 states and the District of Columbia.鈥 CampusClarity even owns the website .
And as strange as may seem for students to be asked how many different people they鈥檝e had sex with in the last three months鈥攁nd the survey explicitly notes that this question is 鈥渋ncluding oral鈥濃攍onger-running Torch readers might not be so shocked. Back in 2007, the University of Delaware (UD) implemented a mandatory program through which students in UD鈥檚 residence halls were asked when they discovered their sexual identity, among other personal questions. (For more about the program, including its goals of thought reform, check out .) After FIREexposed the program鈥檚 shocking violations of UD students鈥 private consciences, the university eliminated the program.
FIRE forced to participate in programs or surveys similar to Delaware鈥檚 or Clemson鈥檚 at their schools should be sure to let FIREknow immediately. FIREshould not and must not be obligated to put data on their sex lives into a gigantic government database simply as a condition of receiving a college education.
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