A communication from Barbara O’Connor, Chief of UConn Police, Elly Daugherty, Associate Vice President & Dean of Students and Elizabeth Conklin, Associate Vice President & Title IX Coordinator reminds the UConn community about sexual violence reporting and resources at the University.
Month: April 2016
UConn Releases Sexual Violence Climate Survey Results
UConn Sexual Assault Campus Climate Survey Fall 2015
The results of UConn’s fall 2015 sexual assault campus climate survey provide an important view into our students’ experiences with and perceptions about sexual violence at UConn. This valuable information will inform our continuing efforts to prevent sexual violence and to enhance support to students when incidents occur.
The full results can be viewed here: Sexual Assault Campus Climate Survey Report
Additional information:
•Sexual Assault Campus Survey FAQs
•President’s Email to the Campus Community 4-11-16
•UConn Today story: UConn Releases Results of Sexual Violence Climate Survey
Dr. Jim Hopper – The Neurobiology of Trauma on April 15
Dr. Jim Hopper will be in Konover Auditorium in the Dodd Center on Friday, April 15, 2016 from 9:00am – 12:15pm.
Jim Hopper, PhD, is an independent consultant and part-time instructor in psychology in the Department of Psychiatry of Harvard Medical School. He has conducted research on the neurobiology of trauma, and trains investigators, prosecutors, judges, and higher-education professionals on its implications. As a researcher and therapist, he has studied and provided therapy to adults suffering from long-term effects of child abuse and sexual assault.
Sexual Assault: Normal and Brain-based but Commonly Misunderstood Responses and Memories
Traumatic experiences have immediate and powerful effects on the human brain. This training explains how fear and trauma can impact brain functioning in ways that alter experience, attention, behavior and memory encoding during sexual assault. Participants will learn about the key brain circuitries impacted by fear and trauma, including the prefrontal cortex and the circuitries of fear and memory. They will come to understand brain-based experiences, behaviors and memory characteristics that are, unfortunately, still commonly misunderstood by many who work with victims of sexual assault. This training provides a critical foundation for learning and applying trauma-informed responses to victims of sexual assault.