000 03025nam a22003497a 4500
650 4 _aSEXUAL VIOLENCE
_9531
999 _c5626
_d5626
005 20250625151439.0
008 171016t2015 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a 978-0-473-32340-0 (pdf)
040 _aAFVC
100 _aJülich, Shirley J.
_93728
245 _aThe sustainable delivery of sexual violence prevention education in schools
_cShirley Jülich, Eileen Oak, Jane Terrell and Gretchen Good
260 _aAuckland, New Zealand :
_bSchool of Social Work, Massey University;
_bRape Prevention Education,
_c2015
300 _aelectronic document (125 pages) ; PDF file
520 _aSexual violence is a crime that cannot be ignored: it causes our communities significant consequences including heavy economic costs, and evidence of its effects can be seen in our criminal justice system, public health system, Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC), and education system, particularly in our schools. Many agencies throughout New Zealand work to end sexual violence. Auckland-based Rape Prevention Education: Whakatu Mauri (RPE) is one such agency, and is committed to preventing sexual violence by providing a range of programmes and initiatives, information, education, and advocacy to a broad range of audiences. Up until early 2014 RPE employed one or two full-time positions dedicated to co-ordinating and training a large pool (up to 15) of educators on casual contracts to deliver their main school-based programmes, BodySafe – approximately 450 modules per year, delivered to some 20 high schools. Each year several of the contract educators, many of whom were tertiary students, found secure full time employment elsewhere. To retain sufficient contract educators to deliver its BodySafe contract meant that RPE had to recruit, induct and train new educators two to three times every year. This model was expensive, resource intense, and ultimately untenable. The Executive Director and core staff at RPE wanted to develop a more efficient and stable model of delivery that fitted its scarce resources. To enable RPE to know what the most efficient model was nationally and internationally, with Ministry of Justice funding, RPE commissioned Massey University to undertake this report reviewing national and international research on sexual violence prevention education (SVPE). (Executive summary). Record #5626
650 _aADOLESCENT RELATIONSHIP ABUSE
_93080
650 _aADOLESCENTS
_943
650 _aEDUCATION
_9218
650 _aLITERATURE REVIEWS
_9350
650 _aPRIMARY PREVENTION
_93268
650 _aSCHOOLS
_9515
650 _aYOUNG PEOPLE
_9660
651 4 _aAUSTRALIA
_92597
651 4 _aCANADA
_92602
651 4 _aUNITED KINGDOM
_92604
651 4 _aUNITED STATES
_92646
700 _aOak, Eileen B.
_96344
700 _aTerrell, Jane
_97096
700 _aGood, Gretchen
_97097
856 _uhttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10179/9830/Sexual%20Violence%20Prevention%20Schools%20Final.pdf
942 _2ddc
_cREPORT