Education Toolkit

 

Under the education umbrella, this SFCC Education Toolkit, or EduKit, aims to provide student leaders with the resources they need to facilitate their own training sessions on campus. Users are encouraged to use and present any of the information in this toolkit as a part of their training sessions. In this toolkit, there are four main modules: Consent, Sexual Violence, Prevention, and Responses. Under these modules, you will find various resources and activities that have been compiled from various sources in addition to resources that SFCC has created. There is also a facilitation guide for facilitators to learn how to use the resources, in addition to pre-made slides that facilitators can use for their own training sessions.


The EduKit project could not have been completed without the incredible collaboration of a number of partners and contributors. First, this project was made possible by the funding of Women and Gender Equality Canada. This funding allowed us to spend the time needed to develop this resource, as well as connect with a community of practice with other organizations working on Sexual Violence Prevention: Action Now Atlantic and Courage to Act.

We want to thank our amazing community organizational partners for their support, consultation, and input: The PEARS Project, The Youth Project of Nova Scotia, DAWN Canada, The Native Youth Sexual Health Network, SIECCAN, CASA, Queen’s Student Diversity Project, Simon Fraser PIRG, University of Manitoba Student’s Union, and Justice for Women.

Additionally, we’d like to extend a special thanks to the members of our Advisory Council, who worked tirelessly to support this project over the course of an entire year, and who stepped up again and again to direct the course of this work. Among others, we’d like to thank Charlie Atkinson, Amie Goodward, Kailey Peckford, Nora Ahmadi Vosta Kalaei, Meaghan Hymers, Ziyana Kotadia, Micah Kalisch, Shraddha Mishra, Sukhpreet Shergill, and Echo Jiang.

Finally, we’d like to thank the rest of the team at Students for Consent Culture, especially Tia Wong and Chantelle Spicer, who dreamed up this project and made it possible.

The EduKit Team,

Victoria Yu, Maddie Brockbank, Ellis Pickersgill and Jaleen Mackay