妻友社区

Nan Stein News



  • Shifting Boundaries: Lessons on Relationships for Students in Middle School, co-developed by Nan Stein, Ed.D., is mentioned in a Time Magazine op-ed.
  • New Article Documents Decades of Activism to Address Sexual Harassment in K-12 Schools

    k12 sexual harassmentIn the Journal of Social Issues, Nan Stein, Ed.D., co-authored an article chronicling the history of the movement to address sexual harassment in schools.


  • Nan Stein, Ed.D., comments on sexual harassment in K-12 schools.

  • Nan Stein, Ed.D., discusses how K-12 schools can address sexual harassment issues.

  • Nan Stein, Ph.D., shares her expertise on teen dating violence and how students are pushing for change in their schools.

  • Frequent acts of sexual harassment can create a school culture where more extreme behavior, including sexual assault, may happen. Dr. Nan Stein discusses this in CNET.


  • WCW Research Scientist Nan Stein, Ph.D., was quoted in this article discussing a sharp rise in sexual abuse cases in North Carolina.

  • Senior Research Scientist Dr. Nan Stein shared her expertise regarding a sexual assault at a North Carolina School.
  • Research Team Completes Study on Campus Sexual Assault as New Title IX Rules Released

    Office of Admissions sign at a U.S. college May 26, 2020

    A report on campus sexual assault by our Justice and Gender-Based Violence Research Initiative was published days before new Title IX rules were issued by the Department of Education.

  • Schools Can Prevent Normalization of Sexual Harassment

    A journal article co-authored by WCW鈥檚 Nan Stein, Ed.D., examines how schools can change their culture to prevent sexual harassment from becoming normalized.

  • Preventing Sexual Harassment in Schools

     

    Stop sexual harassment written on chalkboardNan Stein, Ed.D., brings Shifting Boundaries, a middle school sexual harassment prevention program, to new audiences.


  • Nan Stein, Ed.D., an expert on preventing sexual violence in K-12 schools, weighs in on North Andover High School's response to students' sexual harassment complaints.


  • Dr. Nan Stein discusses the negative impact of adults body-shaming youth in response to a February 2019 incident.

  • Presentations & Convenings: Strategies Addressing Sexual Harassment

    Nan Stein, Ed.D., WCW senior research scientist, and Mina White, M.P.H., from the California Department of Public Health, presented 鈥淓xpanding the Boundaries of Shifting Boundaries: From Initial Implementation to Innovation鈥 during the National Sexual Assault Conference 2018 held in August in Anaheim, CA. In October, Stein presented 鈥淣ipping Sexual Harassment in the Bud鈥 as part of WomenExplore鈥檚 series on 鈥淪truggles, Strengths, and Strategies鈥 in Cambridge, MA, and provided a training to Smith College, during which she shared details about the effectiveness of Shifting Boundaries, a multi-level gender-violence/harassment prevention programming in middle schools.


  • Dr. Nan Stein and her colleague Dr. Bruce Taylor offer three steps that educators can take to address sexual violence and harassment among teenagers.

  • New Findings, Publications, Presentations: Gender-Based Violence

    Empty Courtroom


    Drs. Linda Williams and Nan Stein share findings on the prosecution of sexual violence and sexual harassment in schools, respectively.

  • Global Connections, Educational Equity in India

    While in India in November 2017, Emmy Howe, M.Ed., co-director of the National SEED Project, Nan Stein, Ed.D., WCW senior research scientist, and Puja Kranz- Howe, Lesley University senior and Howe鈥檚 daughter, visited a women鈥檚 cooperative and community educational programs in the greater Mumbai area.


  • Nan Stein of WCW is referenced in this article that discusses sexual harassment.

  • Nan Stein of WCW is mentioned in this article about sexual harassment in schools. 
  • Recommendations for U.S. Policymakers: Sexual Harassment and Sexual Violence in K-12 Schools

    Nan Stein, Ed.D., senior research scientist, 妻友社区

    Sexual Harassment and Violence Are Pervasive in K-12 Schools

    Sexual harassment (SH) and sexual violence (SV) in schools are forms of sex discrimination and are prohibited under Federal Law Title IX. As SH/SV on college campuses consume a lot of attention and resources, so must such investments be directed toward prevention efforts in K-12 schools, where SH/SV are rampant and pervasive.


  • Nan Stein of WCW is mentioned in this article about a domestic abuse agency's presentation at the National Sexual Assault Conference.

  • Nan Stein of WCW is mentioned in this Boston Globe article about how some local school districts handle bullying.

  • Nan Stein of WCW is referenced in this article about sexual assault.

  • Nan Stein of WCW is mentioned in this article about sexual harassment. 
  • Global Connections: Kerr, Stein, Cape Verde, and SEED

    Research & Action Report, Fall/Winter 2015

    Sari Pekkala Kerr, Ph.D., senior research scientist/economist at the 妻友社区 (WCW), spent four weeks visiting the Research Institute of the Finnish Economy (ETLA) in Helsinki where she used grant money from the Yrjo Jahnsson Foundation to continue her research on the project, 鈥淲ithin and Between Firm Trends in Job Polarization: Role of Globalization and Technology.鈥

  • WCW Researchers in Taiwan and Hong Kong

    Research & Action Report Fall/Winter 2004 

      Nan Stein, Ed.D. and Peggy McIntosh, Ph.D. have been invited to participate in the First International Conference on Gender Equity Education in the Asia-Pacific Region, which will be hosted by the Population and Gender Studies Center at National Taiwan University in late November.

  • Rome Anti-Violence Center

    Research & Action Report Spring/Summer 2005 

      In December 2004, Linda Williams, Ph.D. and Nan Stein, Ed.D. met with Orietta Gargano, executive director of the Rome Anti-Violence Center in Italy, to discuss collaborative efforts to stop violence against women and girls in the United States and Italy.

  • Gender-Based Violence in South Africa

    Research & Action Report Fall/Winter 2005 

    Nan Stein, Ed.D., Jasmine Waddell, Ph.D. and Linda Williams, Ph.D. presented at the third South African Gender-Based Violence and Health Conference, designed to bring together researchers, clinicians, program managers, and policy-makers to discuss topics such as HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases, vulnerable children, barrier methods, contraception, gender, and gender-based violence among others.


  • Nan Stein of 妻友社区 is quoted in this article discussing the most effective ways to talk to and help teens.
  • Sexual Harassment in K-12 Schools: Precursor to Campus Sexual Assaults and Gender Violence

    For Immediate Release: May 9, 2014


  • Indiana Gazette, April 4, 2014
    by Staff

  • Nan Stein, Ed.D. named Susan McGee Bailey Research Scholar, beginning July 1, 2014

    For immediate release: March 3, 2014


  • St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 3, 2014
    Leah Thorsen


  • Center for New England Investigative Reporting, July 2013
    Daniel Adams, Sarah Black, Rory McCann, Ruby Scalera, Sarina Tracy


  • Christian Science Monitor, April 12, 2013
    Stacy Teicher Khadaroo

  • White House and Secretary Duncan Cite 妻友社区 Research in VAWA and DOE Communications

     

    For Immediate Release: March 14, 2013


  • harvardeducationletter Harvard Education Letter May/June 2012
    Colleen Gillard

  • childrensafetynetwork Children's Safety Network February 2012
    CSN Staff

  • monitor Monitor on Psychology February 2012
    Christopher Munsey

  • opdv New York State Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence January 5, 2012
    Nan Stein, Ed.D.

  • journaltimes JournalTimes.com December 17, 2011
    Lindsay Fiori

  • harvardeducationletter Harvard Education Letter November/December 2011
    Colleen Gillard
  • Address Sexual Harassment in Adolescence Before it Festers Unchecked in Adulthood

    by Nan Stein, Ed.D. and Bruce Taylor, Ph.D.

    November 28, 2011

    Sexual harassment in schools is still with us鈥攊ts tenacity and persistence were evident in the results from a new national survey of nearly 2,000 students in grades 7-12 released recently by the American Association of University Women (AAUW). As previously documented in their surveys in 1993 and 2001 (eighth through eleventh graders), sexual harassment runs rampant in schools, too often seen by the students as no big deal, normalized through its continuing existence. Yet students are upset by the existence of sexual harassment and they document how it interferes with their concentration, attendance, achievement, course choices, and involvement in activities.


  • justiceblog The Justice Blog November 15, 2011
    Tracy Russo

  • Salon.com November 8, 2011
    Tracy Clark-Flory

  • Education Week November 7, 2011
    Sarah D. Sparks

  • The 妻友社区 Townsman October 13, 2011
    Lee V. Gaines
  • NIJ study: Positive findings for reducing teen dating violence/harassment

    July 12, 2011

    Findings from a National Institute of Justice evaluation of Shifting Boundaries: Lessons on Relationships for Students in Middle School, a youth dating violence prevention program in New York City middle schools, indicate that increasing awareness and monitoring of school environments can be effective strategies for reducing dating violence/ harassment (DV/H) among adolescents.


  • Bloomberg News (online) March 10, 2011
    Kate Andersen Brower and Roger Runningen

  • Boston Herald February 10, 2011
    Margery Eagan

  • The Boston Globe December 30, 2010
    Sarah Schweitzer
  • Commentary: Sexual Harassment Left Behind: What the "bullying" framework is doing to the civil rights laws and framework

    Research & Action Report, Fall/Winter 2010

    by Nan Stein, Ed.D.

    On October 26, 2010, as this commentary went to press, the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights issued a 鈥淒ear Colleague Letter鈥 to schools that clarifies the relationship between bullying and discriminating harassment under civil rights laws: .

    The recent tragic cases of Phoebe Prince and Carl Wal ker -Hoover , two Massachusetts students who took their own lives after being allegedly bullied by their peers, force us to look carefully at the ways in which school personnel are treating and framing student-to-student interactions. I want to propose that, in fact, both children were sexually harassed by their peers; and to call it "bullying" minimizes what they endured.

     


  • The Triangle (Drexel University)
    Jess Herbine
    March 12, 2010


  • Philadelphia Examiner
    Gloria Blakely
    March 3, 2010


  • 妻友社区 Weston
    Janet Mendelsohn
    February 18, 2010


  • boston.com
    Barbara F. Meltz
    February 3, 2010


  • Arizona Daily Star
    Rhonda Bodfield and Carmen Duarte
    September 27, 2009

  • Nan Stein Presents at Mid Sweden International Network for Gender Studies meeting

    Research & Action Report Spring/Summer 2009

    Nan Stein Ed.D., traveled to Sundsvall, and Osterund, Sweden in May for the Mid Sweden International Network for Gender Studies (MING) inaugural meeting focusing on women鈥檚 health and welfare. There Stein presented one of three open lectures on 鈥淲hat a difference a word makes,鈥 and she participated in several network meetings, school workshops, and consultations with scholars. The objectives of the MING network include constituting a creative interdisciplinary meeting place for researchers interested in health and welfare from a gender perspective in a broad, interdisciplinary sense, in order to improve and develop knowledge in this area of research, including strengthening internationalization in the network. 

  • New Funding for Sex Ed, Dating Violence, and Disability Rights

    October 15, 2008


  • The Tampa Tribune
    Karen Branch-Brioso
    March 22, 2008

  • Anita Hill, Panel Address Equity in Education

    March 11, 2008

  • Nan Stein Travels to Castilla

    Research & Action Report Fall/Winter 2007

    Nan Stein traveled to the University of Castilla-La Mancha and the Women鈥檚 Institute of Castilla-La Mancha in October to exchange ideas and discuss issues around gender violence.

  • Spotlight on New Research at WCW: Evaluation of Sex-Ed Curriculum, Examination of Bullying Perpetration and Sexual Violence

    December 15, 2007


  • Agence France Press
    Glenn Chapman
    December 2, 2007


  • The Guardian (UK)
    Emine Saner
    November 30, 2007


  • Newsweek
    Roya Wolverson
    November 16, 2007


  • The Boston Globe
    Anita F. Hill
    November 12, 2007


  • Education Week; Teacher Magazine
    Vaishali Honawar
    September 4, 2007


  • The New York Times
    Lisa Foderaro
    June 20, 2007


  • ABC News
    Russell Goldman
    April 4, 2007
  • Nan Stein Meets with WOMANKIND in the U.K.

    Research & Action Report Fall/Winter 2008

    Nan Stein traveled to the United Kingdom to meet with WOMANKIND in October regarding their work on "sexual bullying."

     

  • Back to School

    by Nan Stein, Ed.D.
    August 2000

    Going back to school this year is going to be unlike any other year; there are extra metal detectors, armed guards, extra security cameras, clipped on photo ids, missing lockers, and more restrictive dress codes. But, this school year also includes extra protection for students who have been sexually harassed by their peers. Read more.

  • Reaffirming Rights in Our Nation's Schools

    Welcome to the post-Columbine world of zero-tolerance school discipline. Zero tolerance means one strike and you鈥檙e out, no matter what. Schools are quick to suspend students for anything that could be deemed a weapon, a drug, or a threat, and the result is that students are being controlled in ways that shred their Constitutional rights. Students have been suspended for papers they have written, thoughts they have had, and drawings they have created (Commonwealth v. Milo, M., 433 Mass. 149 [2001]). Elementary-school children have been suspended for comments made in the heat of a touch football game or in response to a teacher denying permission to go to the bathroom, comments that schools characterized as "death threats." In a case from Jonesboro, Arkansas, an eight year-old boy was suspended for pointing a chicken nugget toward a teacher and saying "Pow, pow."


  • The Carlisle Mosquito
    Darlene D鈥橝mour
    June 9, 2006

  • What About the Boys?

    Education Week
    by Lyn Mikel Brown, Ed.D., Meda Chesney-Lind, Ph.D., and Nan Stein, Ed.D.
    June 7, 2006

    There are legitimate concerns about boys鈥 achievement, but there are also legitimate concerns about the way the current issue is being framed. Headlines repeatedly pit girls against boys, and accompanying photos show boys with hurt expressions, dejected, slumped over their desks. The girls who surround them are caught in mid-laugh, whispering to a friend, sitting atop the monkey bars, staring at the camera with defiant self-confidence.


  • Leadership Insider
    Thomas Hutton
    August 2006

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