What is Title IX - Basics
               
	 
                       
                          
                          What is Title IX?
                         
                     				         
        
                          Title IX of the Education  Amendments of 1972 is a federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in education.  It reads:
                          
                          "No person in the United  States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied  the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program  or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
                            --Legal Citation: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, and its  implementing regulation at 34 C.F.R. Part 106 (Title IX) 
                            
                            
                          Sex discrimination includes sexual  harassment and sexual assault.
                          Know your Rights: Title IX Basics
                          Your school’s obligation to  respond to sexual violence
                          
                            - Under Title IX federally funded schools must  ensure that students of all ages are not denied or limited in their abilities  to participate in or benefit from the school’s educational programs or  activities on the basis of sex.
 
                            - Once your school is made aware of sexual violence,  it must take prompt and appropriate steps to investigate or otherwise determine  what occurred. 
 
                            - Your school is required to protect you and  ensure your safety as necessary promptly.
 
                            - Your school should provide you with information  regarding campus and local resources.  
 
                          
                          Students protected by Title IX
                          
                            - All students are protected from sex  discrimination irrespective of gender, sexual orientation, age, disability  status, race, national origin, or enrollment status (part-time/full-time).
 
                            - Male students have the same rights as female  students.
 
                          
                          Title IX procedural requirements
                          
                            - Your school must provide a notice of  nondiscrimination.
 
                            - Your school must have a least one designated  employee to coordinate its efforts to comply with and carry out its  responsibilities under Title IX.
 
                            - Your school must adopt and publish grievance  procedure providing for the prompt and equitable resolution of student and  employee sex discrimination complaints.
 
                          
                          Confidentiality and Obligation to Respond
                          
                            - Your school should clearly explain the reporting  obligations of all school employees because the obligations differ among  different employees.
 
                            - Your school should only disclose information to  individuals who are responsible for the school’s response to the sexual  violence. All efforts should be made on the school’s part to keep you safe and  protect your privacy. 
 
                          
                          Investigations and Hearings
                          
                            - Your school must conduct an adequate, reliable,  impartial and prompt investigation
 
                            - Both parties have an equal opportunity to  present relevant witnesses and other evidence.
 
                            - Your school must use a  preponderance-of-the-evidence (ie., more likely than not) standard in all Title  IX proceedings.
 
                            - If permitted by your school, both parties are  able to have advisors, lawyers, expert testimony, etc. at any stage throughout  the proceedings.
 
                            - If appeals are permitted by your school, both  parties must have the opportunity to do so
 
                            - Both parties must be notified, in writing, of  the outcome of both the complaint and any appeal.
 
                            - If a criminal investigation is pending or in  progress, your school should not wait for the conclusion of the criminal  investigation to begin its own Title IX investigation.
 
                          
                          Remedies and Notice of Outcomes
                          
                            - If it is determined that sexual violence created  a hostile environment, the school must take prompt and effective steps  reasonably calculated to end the sexual violence, eliminate the hostile  environment, prevent its recurrence, and as appropriate, remedy its effects.
 
                            - Various remedies will include assisting you and  helping you continue your education (such as counseling, retaking courses  without penalty, academic support). Even if these remedies are refused during  the interim, your school should offer then again at the conclusion of the Title  IX proceedings. 
 
                            - Your school may also provide remedies for the  broader student population such as developing materials on sexual violence to  distribute to all students, conducting bystander intervention trainings,  issuing new policies, and training employees on the school’s responsibilities  to address allegations of sexual violence and how to conduct Title IX  investigations. 
 
                          
                          If you want to learn more about your rights, or if you believe that  your school is in violation of the federal law, you may wish to contact the  U.S. Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights at 1-(800)-421-3481 or on  their website at  to fill out an online complaint form. 
                         Âé¶¹´«Ã½¸ßÇå University does not tolerate sexual  misconduct of any type. Our Catholic, Lasallian tradition sees each and every  human as created in the image of God, full of dignity and worth. Sexual  misconduct is a serious affront to one’s dignity as a person. Sexual misconduct  includes but is not limited to sexual harassment, non-consensual sexual  intercourse, non-consensual sexual contact and sexual exploitation, as defined  below.
                                 
                 
 
 
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