Sexual Harassment Training

In our Sexual Harassment Awareness training seminars your employees will learn and apply the important skills of handling sexual harassment issues and complaints. This hands on workshop thoroughly addresses the elements of how to prevent unacceptable behavior. The class includes a detailed overview of what sexual harassment is, explains legal definitions, discusses sexual harassment prevention, and shows how to handle sexual harassment complaints and maintain a positive work environment.

For more information about individual sexual harassment training courses please complete this form.  Once the form is received one of our consultants will provide you with a confidential proposal that will include a detailed description of the training seminar and the costs for conducting it. 

Sexual Harassment Training:
Avoiding Mistakes in Sexual Harassment Prevention Training

Headache #1: An employer shipped out copies of an expensive video program to dozens of distant managers without providing HR staff to either answer questions or ensure that employees were actually following and learning from the programs. Many of the managers turned on the videos in break rooms and left them running while employees came and went.

Headache #2: During face-to-face anti-harassment training given by a lower-level supervisor, he let it be known that he had no use for the training and was just going through the motions.

Regardless of whether or not you comply with any mandated sexual harassment training laws, jurors are increasingly unwilling to accept a "check the box" approach to harassment prevention training; they want to see training that is interactive, memorable, supported by senior management, and delivered by a credible, well-trained presenter. Given that an ineffective training program will provide little or no protection in the event of a lawsuit, let's take a look at the essential components of an effective training program and identify some of the most common pitfalls.

Effort May Count - But Not Much

Harassment prevention is not an easy subject to teach. One reason many training programs are of such poor quality is that a real mastery of the subject requires a high level of legal understanding coupled with the practical concepts understood by those who have a firm grasp of the day-to-day realities of the workplace. Many training programs fail to integrate the two disciplines and thus fall short in one respect or the other.

Another major reason is that, up until now, most employers have viewed anti-harassment training as something you show up and provide information about, then let them "learn" by doing. Employers, however, cannot afford to let supervisors "wing it" when it comes to learning how to recognize, refrain from, or properly handle sexual harassment. Supervisors and managers not only have to master complicated concepts in advance, but must also practice proper techniques for effective prevention and complaint handling. That requires time, attention, and education, not just training.

Who Should Train

As the quality of compliance training has increasingly become grist for the plaintiff attorney's mill, the selection of an outstanding training provider a critical business issue. The advantages of in-house HR or training personnel include cost and the fact that such staff is knowledgeable about the particular workplace, the employees being trained, and the particular business or industry.

On the other hand, harassment prevention is a topic in which knowledge is necessary but not sufficient as some of the most challenging components for instructors is anticipating and responding to the challenging questions and negative attitudes of course attendees. Additionally, because of the natural resistance many employees and managers initially feel towards this subject matter, they are more likely to question the "agendas" of in-house trainers, no matter how neutral or objective they may strive to be.

Harassment prevention training specialists - whether internal or external - should be able to offer: legally accurate and up-to-date analysis as well as practical and realistic programming; lively, interactive presentations; appropriate educational techniques; and a variety of formats, follow-up and curriculum options. One thing is clear; educational research indicates that adult learners learn better with a live teacher - especially one they can respect.

Training Mistakes: When the Treatment is as Bad as the Disease

Mishandled training not only may fail to insulate an employer from harassment claims and punitive damages awards, but also can create its own legal problems. Accordingly, employers should seek to create training sessions that are "jury worthy" in tone and language by avoiding the following traps:

Asks the learner to make legal conclusions: Some harassment prevention training programs present scenarios and then ask the participant "Is this harassment?" The learning points that such a question is trying to cover can be communicated just as effectively without making a legal conclusion. In addition, questions that ask for legal conclusions are problematic in that they can be used as evidence against the company in the event of a future lawsuit if a manager or employee engages in behavior that was defined as "harassment" in a previous training class. Essentially, the company's hands may be tied because of evidence it created against itself. See Cadena v. Pacesetter Corp., 224 F.3d 1203 (10thCir. 2000).

Increases Liability by "Setting the Bar Too High": For example, in workplace harassment training, a program may state that any discussion of personal relationships in the workplace is inappropriate. While this approach is well-intended, it can actually be damaging to the organization for the following reasons: 1) If the program "concludes" that such behavior is unacceptable, then it has made a legal conclusion that could be used against the organization in the event of a future lawsuit, and 2) An overly "sanitized" message may also spark an unwillingness on behalf of the learner to take the content in the program seriously.

Focuses only on sexual harassment: The US Supreme Court and the EEOC have made clear that a harassment prevention program should address all of the "protected categories." See Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Enforcement Guidance: Vicarious Employer Liability for Unlawful Harassment by Supervisors (6/18/99); See also Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 188 S. Ct. 2257 (1998) and Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 118 S. Ct. 2275 (1998). To be effective, a workplace harassment prevention training program should address harassment related to gender, race, national origin, color, disability, age and religion as well as other "protected categories" under state law, such as sexual orientation.

Fails to Provide Appropriate Content for Appropriate Groups: One of the greatest challenges in creating an employment law training program is ensuring that the content communicates the correct information, while not encouraging employees to bring lawsuits. Employees primarily require information about the employers' commitment to a harassment-free workplace, assurances against retaliation as well as instruction on the employers' policies and procedures, and expected standards of conduct. Managers need education not only in recognizing harassment and discrimination and refraining from it, but also in proper handling of complaints or other situations possibly raising the issue, as well as such matters as preventing retaliation and effective follow-up with the complainant. A thorough discussion of legal liability is really only appropriate for managers, who need to know more detailed information about the law, and the specific risks that misconduct poses to both them and the company.

Focuses narrowly on legalese: Harassment/discrimination prevention programs are designed to educate employees and managers - not lawyers or HR experts. Therefore, when discussing "the law," employers should focus on what employees most need to know: what is and isn't harassment, how to report it and how to maintain a retaliation-free workplace. Manager training programs must give managers and supervisors the practical tools they need to implement a policy successfully, how to legally interview for hiring and promotion, and how to manage performance in a way that does not discriminate against anyone on the basis of protected characteristics.

Fails to Reflect Your Organization's Specific Workplace Policies: A harassment/discrimination prevention program should routinely incorporate an organization's specific workplace policies. In fact, if a training program includes a tracking mechanism that shows receipt and acknowledgement of that policy, then the program performs the dual function of training and policy dissemination. In addition, training should include policy-related issues such as reporting procedures, confidentiality issues, the conduct of investigations and retaliation prohibitions. While employer policies should emphasize zero tolerance with respect to discrimination and harassment, they also must encourage employees to report inappropriate behavior-with many options in which to report a complaint, including the option of reporting a complaint to a person not in the employee's chain of command-to ensure confidential and prompt investigations and to protect victims and witnesses from retaliation.

Fails to Replicate a Realistic Working Environment: Many harassment prevention programs use vignettes and case studies that seem unrealistic and "hokey" and don't represent the more common types of situation that employees encounter in the workplace. This approach not only causes chuckles from employees, a jury you're trying to convince of your good-faith efforts to prevent a serious topic will likely have the same reaction.

The Bottom Line

HR should be defined not by what it does, but what it delivers. A sound understanding of the civil rights laws is just a starting point in the quest for legal compliance and effective work relations; it's the rest of the journey - the attitude and expertise of the trainer, the quality of the content, the receptivity of the learners - that determine how successful the harassment/discrimination prevention program is in meeting its goals. The savvy HR professional will pick a harassment prevention training provider who has the emotional intelligence as well as the expertise and experience to transform a skeptical audience into compliance partners and more effective communicators.

Source: Dr. Joni Johnston link

Related: Sexual Harassment Training

Sexual Harassment Training Online

90-Day Online Course with Immediate 24/7 access on any internet enabled device

Course Certificate provided by email on completion (no delay), only $34.95

Sexual Harassment Training Course Objectives/Learning Outcomes

Sexual Harassment Training Course Objectives/Learning Outcomes
Participants will learn to:

  • Identify sexual harassment behavior and issues and stop them
  • Identify the difference between sexual harassment and discrimination
  • Distinguish between the work and social environments and identify boundaries
  • Minimize conflict and maximize the effectiveness of employees who handle sexual harassment complaints
  • Recognize correct and incorrect behavior
  • Use interviewing techniques to draw out information from all involved parties (management only)
  • All employees will become aware of the laws covering sexual harassment so they can stop any incidents before they occur

For more information about individual seminars, one-on-one training and group seminars please complete this form

Once the form is received one of our Executive Staff members will call or email you. A confidential training proposal will be provided. 

What is Sexual Harassment?

What is the legal definition of sexual harassment in the workplace?

Answer: Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature constitute sexual harassment when this conduct explicitly or implicitly affects an individual's employment, unreasonably interferes with an individual's work performance, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work environment.

What are A few questions you may want to ask yourself?

Answer: What is my company's sexual harassment policy? What is sexual harassment law? What are some sexual harassment statistics? Do my employees truly understand the legal definition of sexual harassment? Am I taking seriously my obligation as an employer to protect my employees from hostile workplace events? How much money would my company be willing to pay to settle a sexual harassment law suit? Do I really know how to prevent sexual harassment from happening?

What else do I need to know about Workplace Sexual Harassment Training?

Answer: We offer corporate sexual harassment training classes where organizations can purchase discounted packages. Each participant can be monitored by your management team or human resources professionals. In the online program, attendees work in their individual sexual harassment course at their own pace. Total real time to complete the course is approximately 2-hours, but participants can log in and out as needed to address other tasks.