According to a 2001 survey of current students, 9.6% report having been the victim of teacher sexual misconduct. Apparently, a slightly higher number of alleged student victims were female (56%) than male (44%), with a corresponding percentage of alleged perpetrators being male (57%) versus female (43%). Approximately 28% of the incidents reported were same-sex, with 15% being reported as male-male and 13% being reported as female-female.
So I guess the bottom line is that we should stop talking about it and re-evaluate our own primative social mores -- the incidence of it is so common, it must be natural!
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markomalley
By the way, this has been studied.
According to a 2001 survey of current students, 9.6% report having been the victim of teacher sexual misconduct. Apparently, a slightly higher number of alleged student victims were female (56%) than male (44%), with a corresponding percentage of alleged perpetrators being male (57%) versus female (43%). Approximately 28% of the incidents reported were same-sex, with 15% being reported as male-male and 13% being reported as female-female.
Documentation of a number of studies can be found here: http://www.ed.gov/rschstat/research/pubs/m...view/report.pdf
So I guess the bottom line is that we should stop talking about it and re-evaluate our own primative social mores -- the incidence of it is so common, it must be natural!
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