Loading reviews…

Good course

Good course which clearly shows how to recognise and prevent sexual harassment in the workplace.

It claims to help with grey areas but it actually makes the question black and white, leading to a fear of any interaction with colleagues.

The takeaway from this course is that one is best advised not to interact with colleagues who might conceivably complain that they are the 'recipient' of some kind of 'unwanted' attention. How will one know who those colleagues are? How does one know that a smile or compliment doesn't count as unwanted attention? If that is the intention of the course, it is well devised. If not, it isn't.

Excellent and concise

Easy to understand, not rushed and explained in a clear way.

Very informative and easy to understand

This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars

5

Training was very good, easy to understand and very detailed.

it is informative

Sexual Harassment Awareness Training is clear, easy to understand and informative. The training provides advice on to know respond to incident that concerns sexual harassment.

it is informative

Sexual Harassment Awareness Training is clear, easy to understand and informative. The training provides advice on to know respond to incident that concerns sexual harassment.

Informative, Clear, easy to understand

I found the course interesting and informative it gave a clear definition of sexual harassment in the workplace, identifying it and how to deal with a difficult situation

Clear, to the point

Informative with clear guidelines

Poor functionality, Insulting, Infantile, Triggering

This course has poor functionality: it does not allow the user either to speed up the (very slow) delivery of the videos or (better) read the transcript instead of watching the videos. If you're wanting to avoid triggering participants, you should not force them to watch videos of scenarios, the majority of which are gratuitous (that means: they're unnecessary). The slow delivery of the presenters makes the user feel they are being talked down to. It is insulting to represent the majority of sexual harassment (in your scenarios and videos) as perpetrated by women against men, when, globally, the truth is the opposite. Indeed, you massively underrepresent the evidence of sexual harassment of women: in the UK alone, it's 97%. This should be acknowledged, rather than covered up and obfuscated through the representation of most harassers as women, as in your videos. (See: https://www.openaccessgovernment.org/97-of-women-in-the-uk/105940/#:~:text=A%20YouGov%20survey%20carried%20out%20by%20UN%20Women,authorities%E2%80%99%20capacity%20to%20handle%20an%20incident%20like%20this.)