Lampman C, Crew E C, Lowery S, Tompkins K A, Mulder M
University of Alaska Anchorage, Department of Psychology.
University of Florida, Department of Clinical Health Psychology.
J Women High Educ. 2016;9(2):169-189. doi: 10.1080/19407882.2016.1199385. Epub 2016 Aug 11.
Academic contrapower harassment (ACPH) occurs when someone with seemingly less power in an educational setting (e.g., a student) harasses someone more powerful (e.g., a professor). A representative sample of 289 professors from U.S. institutions of higher education described their worst incident with ACPH. Open-ended responses were coded using a keyword text analysis. Compared to the experiences of men faculty, women faculty reported that students were more likely to challenge their authority, argue or refuse to follow course policies, and exhibit disrespectful or disruptive behaviors. Although sexual harassment was uncommon, men faculty were more likely than women faculty to recount such incidents. Women faculty reported significantly more negative outcomes as a result of ACPH (e.g., anxiety, stress-related illness, difficulty concentrating, wanting to quit) than men faculty, and negative outcomes were most likely to result from ACPH involving intimidation, threats, or bullying from students. Implications for the prevention and reporting of ACPH are discussed.
学术反向权力骚扰(ACPH)是指在教育环境中,看似权力较小的一方(如学生)对权力较大的一方(如教授)进行骚扰。来自美国高等教育机构的289名教授组成的代表性样本描述了他们遭遇ACPH的最糟糕经历。开放式回答通过关键词文本分析进行编码。与男教师的经历相比,女教师报告称,学生更有可能挑战她们的权威、争论或拒绝遵守课程政策,并表现出不尊重或破坏性行为。虽然性骚扰并不常见,但男教师比女教师更有可能讲述此类事件。女教师报告称,ACPH导致的负面结果(如焦虑、与压力相关的疾病、难以集中注意力、想要辞职)比男教师多得多,而负面结果最有可能是由学生的恐吓、威胁或欺凌等ACPH行为导致的。文中还讨论了ACPH的预防和报告问题。