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close this bookPersonal Safety in Cross-Cultural Transition (Peace Corps)
View the documentInformation
View the documentAcknowledgments
View the documentIntroduction
close this folderUnit one: General personal safety
View the documentSession I: Pre-departure design on rape and personal safety
close this folderSession II: In-country design on general personal safety
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentAttachment A: Sample situations for step 7.b
close this folderUnit two: Rape and personal safety
View the documentSession I: Pre-departure design on rape and personal safety
close this folderSession II: In-country design on rape and personal safety
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentAttachment A: Developing a critical incident for session II, step 3b.
View the documentAttachment B: Sample situations for step 9.b
View the documentAttachment C: Case study on AMY
View the documentAttachment D: Role play: Supporting a rape victim
View the documentPeace corps manual section: Sexual assault
close this folderUnit three: Volunteer workshop on handling difficult situations and peer counseling
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentPart one
View the documentPart two
close this folderPart three
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentAttachment A: Sample situations for step 9.b
View the documentAttachment B: Workshop evaluation form
close this folderHandouts for pre-departure design on general personal safety: Unit one
close this folderSession I
View the documentHandout 1: Critical incident
View the documentHandout 2: Volunteers' advice to new volunteers
close this folderSession II
View the documentHandout 1: Volunteers' advice to new volunteers
View the documentHandout 2: Critical incident: Possible sexual overtures by Host Country supervisor to female PCV
View the documentHandout 3: Critical incident: Social/sexual pressure encountered by a male PCV relating to his community acceptance and identity
View the documentHandout 4: Assertiveness rights
close this folderHandouts for pre-departure design on rape and personal safety: Unit two
close this folderSession I
View the documentHandout 1: Critical incident
View the documentHandout 2: Myths and realities of rape
close this folderSession II
View the documentHandout 1: Volunteers' advice to new volunteers
View the documentHandout 2: Critical incident: Social/sexual pressure encountered by a male PCV relating to his community acceptance and identity
View the documentHandout 3: Critical Incident: Possible sexual overtures by host country supervisor to female PCV
View the documentHandout 4: Common reactions to rape
View the documentHandout 5: Assertiveness rights
close this folderHandouts for volunteer workshop on handling difficult situations and peer counseling: Unit three
View the documentHandout 1: Volunteers' advice to new volunteers
View the documentHandout 2: Critical incident: possible sexual overtures by host country supervisor to female PCV
View the documentHandout 3: Critical incident: Social/sexual pressure encountered by a male PVC relating to his community acceptance and identity
View the documentHandout 4: Assertiveness rights
View the documentHandout 5: Case study on AMY
View the documentHandout 6: Jack
View the documentHandout 7: Common reactions to assault
View the documentHandout 8: The awareness wheel
View the documentHandout 9: Behavior checklist non-verbal attending behavior

(introduction...)

RATIONALE: As discussed during the CREST/CAST people are more at risk when they are in periods of transition, i.e., moving, traveling, or settling into a new environment. Trainees began to look at their own personal safety and to generate strategies for prevention. Now that trainees have had some experience with the new country, the culture, and hopefully their sites, they are better able to formulate concrete country specific strategies for dealing with their personal safety.


These strategies will better equip them to prevent specific situations such as theft, robbery, and sexual assault. These are not, however, the only situations Volunteers find to be difficult and possibly threatening. There are awkward and stressful situations which often involve personal and professional relationships. Volunteers often find these are not prevented by taking obvious precautions; instead, they are best dealt with by understanding the cultural aspects of the situations and by personal behavior that is assertive and consistent.


This session helps trainees develop concrete preventive strategies while also developing skills for handling problematic social situations. In addition, trainees will look at non-verbal behavior which might be inconsistent with their verbal messages, and might influence how they are perceived by their communities.


TOTAL TIME: 2 hours


GOALS:
- To provide trainees with an opportunity to look at their new living situations and identify strategies for personal safety.
- To develop effective ways to handle situations which are typically difficult for Volunteers.
- To look at behaviors and how they might be interpreted in different cultures.


TRAINER PREPARATION:


1. Familiarize yourself with the handouts used in this session.


2. If you are not familiar with Assertiveness Training, you should read several of the background articles and/or books recommended so that you will be able to respond to questions and provide examples for the session.


3. Brief country staff or RPCVs on their roles and responsibilities during the session. In particular they should be ready to provide information on how host country nationals handle difficult situations and how they interpret certain behaviors. They should also provide some illustrative situations.


MATERIALS NEEDED:


1. Handouts 1, 2, 3, and 4
2. Newsprint and markers


PROCEDURES:


Opening Statement and Goals


1a. Introduce the session by reminding participants that they started discussing personal safety during the CREST. Review the main points from that session. (See Session I: Pre-Departure Design on General Personal Safety).

[5 min]

1b. Share the goals of the session.


1c. Explain the importance of looking at the country-specific information and making their strategies more appropriate. Link this information to their site visits and preparations for leaving training.


1d. Ask them to identify, based on their knowledge of the country, times and situations when they are most at risk, e.g., traveling on public transportation. List these on a flipchart.

[5-10 min]

Sample Flipchart
- Traveling on public transportation
- Walking on the street in major cities
- Looking for a house
- First time in market
- Arriving to new site late in evening
- Meeting new people
ETC.


TRAINERS' NOTE: This exercise may be done in one group or several small groups, depending on the number of participants.


Appropriate Precautions to Take

[10-15 min]

2a. Ask participants to think of specific steps they can take to reduce the risk in each of the situations they listed. Encourage them to be as specific as possible and remember the advice they developed during CREST/CAST.


Examples of steps:
- When traveling on buses, be familiar with the schedules.
- When walking on the street, look like you know where you are going. If lost, don't review the map on the street, go into a cafe or store.


2b. Summarize by explaining that these are precautions that are appropriate in the U.S. as well. If done in small groups, have the groups post the lists and discuss the similarities and differences in strategies.


2c. Ask for any comments from participants and bridge to next activity.


2d. Distribute Handout 1 as a summary of advice given by PCVs to new PCVs.


Handling Problematic Social Situations


3a. Explain that some of the situations they may face as Volunteers cannot be handled by putting a lock on the door or knowing the bus schedule. Some of the situations will involve interpersonal relationships which may require them to set personal limits and say no. This involves balancing their desire to be culturally sensitive with the ability to assert themselves when appropriate.


3b. Distribute and have participants read the two critical incidents, handouts 2 and 3.

[10-15 min]

3c. Lead a discussion on the following questions:
- How might they feel in the same situation?
- How might they handle it?
- How might they prevent it?


TRAINERS' NOTE: The situations result from the Volunteers' inability to effectively set limits on what is acceptable behavior and what is not. This involves being able to assert themselves. Elicit this information from trainees and use it to bridge to next step.


Reasons Why We Do Not Assert Ourselves


4a. Explain that had Joe and Julie (characters in critical incidents) been able to say no without feeling guilty, or been able to explain what was important for them, the situation may not have grown to be so awkward.

[10 min]

4b. Share with participants some of the reasons why Joe, Julie, and all of us may have difficulty asserting ourselves.
- not wanting to hurt someone's feelings
- wanting to fit in/be accepted
- different expectations
- feeling inferior
- mixed messages being given
- self-doubts
- not knowing how to
- not wanting to appear rude/angry


4c. Have trainees summarize the results/ consequences of not being assertive.


TRAINERS' NOTE: If you are not familiar with this material, read some of the recommended articles so that you will be able to explain this to participants.


Assertion vs. Aggression


5a. Explain that there are three ways of handling situations: non-assertively, assertively and aggressively. Each one may be appropriate in certain situations. However, the Volunteer needs to know which one is most appropriate for different situations, and how to act in these different ways.

[10-15 min]

5b. Explain that there is a difference between asserting oneself and acting aggressively. Many people think that if they are assertive they will be perceived as aggressive. Briefly explain the differences:


ASSERTIVE: Describes occasions in which individuals stand up for themselves in we, that do not violate others' rights. It means respecting oneself, valuing oneself and treating oneself with as much intelligence consideration and goodwill as any human being deserves.


NON-ASSERTIVE: Giving up one's rights in deference to others.


AGGRESSIVE: Occurs when people stand up for their rights in ways that violate other's rights. Usually results in a put-down of others.


6c. Have participants provide examples of each type of behavior to ensure they recognize the difference.


TRAINERS' NOTE: Participants may feel that aggressive behavior is appropriate in some situations. This is true; however, they should be made aware of the consequences of aggressive behavior as well as non-assertive behavior. Demonstrate that if they wish to maintain, or if they must maintain, a relationship with the person assertive behaviors may be more appropriate. Aggressive behaviors tend to terminate or detract from establishing a mutually respectful ongoing relationship.


6d. Share the handout on Assertive Rights and ask for any react ions .

[5 min]

6e. Explain that these concepts are universal. People can be assertive or aggressive in any culture. The components of being assertive may change from culture to culture.


6f. Ask participants to review Joe/Julie's situations and discuss how they might handle the situations assertively.


TRAINERS' NOTE: You can have participants role-play the situations with host country input on how they would be received. Be supportive to the Volunteers who role-play and be willing to show how the situations could be handled assertively.

[15 min]
(if you include role play)

Non-Verbal Behaviors - Their Impact on Our Credibility


7a. Stress the need for non-verbal messages which are consistent with the assertive verbal messages. If a Volunteer is telling someone that he or she does not want to sleep with them, and yet his/her body language or social behavior is incongruent with this message, then the self-assertion is less effective.


Body language and social behavior can only be congruent if Volunteers are aware of what certain behaviors may mean in any given culture. Interpretation of a behavior may be culture-specific.


7b. Explain that participants will now look at some behaviors and how they may be interpreted in the host country.


Have a list of behaviors which may be acceptable in the U.S., but which give off unwanted messages in the host country. (These should be developed by host country representatives. See Attachment A).


TRAINERS' NOTE: These situations need to be' very brief (one sentence), and country specific. They are to be given to the trainees as examples of behavior that they may exhibit and which they should reconsider in light of a better understanding of the host culture's interpretation of these behaviors. See Attachment B at the end of the unit for examples of these situations.


7c. Read these behaviors and lead a discussion on the following points:


- Where would these situations be acceptable?

[30 min]

- How might these behaviors be interpreted in this culture - HC culture - (have country staff help interpret this). It is important to have HCNs discuss whether there are also things host country women avoid doing.


- How would you feel about changing your behaviors in these situations if you thought some of them were culturally inappropriate?


- How can you determine which behaviors are appropriate and inappropriate?


TRAINERS' NOTE: Trainees must be aware that they may need to change behaviors and that in some cases this will involve changing behaviors they have struggled to develop, i.e., independent behaviors. When thinking about modifying these behaviors, it is important for them to recognize the choice involved. Stress that if they choose to modify their behavior they do so knowing that it is a temporary change that will increase their integration into the community; it does not mean a permanent change or a compromise in their self-image or esteem. Should they not feel comfortable making some adjustments in their behavior, they need to weigh the consequences of their behavior and determine if they wish to live for 2 years in this new culture. They have an equal right not to assert themselves or to act aggressively if they feel the need. Again, these behaviors cost the Volunteer something -people will come to mistrust them, not value their company, etc., if they use these behaviors consistently.


Summary


8a. Summarize what they have discussed to this point:
- Safety is a universal concern.
- Precautions and ways of dealing with safety are culturally specific.
- Social and work situations may be difficult or uncomfortable because Volunteers are not asserting themselves and/or they are sending out mixed messages which complicate the situations.
- Volunteers have the right and the power to change whatever behaviors they choose to change. If they do not choose to change, they need to be aware of the possible consequences of those behaviors.

[5 min]

8b. Close by asking participants to think about what they have learned and how it will influence the way they go about settling into their new communities.