Background on Workplace Violence
Response
Action
Prevention
100

This term refers to a pattern of behaviour that is observable over time, usually involving specific power dynamics between the victim(s) and the perpetrator(s).

What is Abuse?

100

This term refers to a mental barrier that affects a survivor's presentation, disclosure, and recollection of their experience of violence/abuse. There's no universal definition for it, but it often shows up in "fight," "flight," or "freeze."

What is Trauma?

100
This term refers to the phenomenon in which the greater number of people present results in a decreased likelihood of intervention in an emergency situation.

What is the Bystander Effect?

100

The activity that we completed at the start of the prevention section, where we discussed expectations of traditional gender roles and their impacts.

What are the Gender Boxes?

200

This term refers to actions or workplace cultures that involve harmful and offensive behaviours/words directed at a specific person or group of people, which often results in someone feeling unsafe, humiliated, belittled, and/or violated.

What is Hazing?

200

Different than sympathy, Brené Brown's animated short video discusses how this approach/response focuses instead on being present with someone in the moment, not trying to "silver lining" it.

What is Empathy?

200

The model for bystander intervention, including methods for successfully and safely intervening if and when harm is happening.

What are the 5 Ds?

200

This industry has been shown to have alarmingly high rates of suicide, which is a large part of the reason we focus on the skilled trades for these discussions.

What is Construction?

300

Coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, this term helps us understand how our social identities interact with social systems of oppression to produce unique experiences.

What is Intersectionality?

300

This acronym gives people a quick reminder of how to respond to a disclosure, focusing on validation, asking how you can support, and making sure that we respond without judgment.

What is TALK?

300

One of the main reasons why the bystander effect takes place, this process refers to how seeing others not respond might make us fear judgment, ridicule, or violence. 

Hint: the elevator video!

What is the Social Pressure to Behave Correctly?

300

This term refers to workspaces that are traditionally male-dominated and are characterized by specific expectations that uphold rigid views of masculinity.

What are Hypermasculine Workplaces?

400

Depicted in the training as a pyramid, this term helps us understand how violence can escalate from the foundations of sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, inappropriate jokes, harassment, etc.

What is the Spectrum of Violence?

400
An important step for workers to take when responding to disclosure, this term refers to how we must be transparent about what we are ethically required to do if we receive a disclosure, such as reporting it and therefore not maintaining someone's anonymity or privacy.

What is Limits to Confidentiality?

400

One of the main methods of bystander intervention, this approach should only be used when other forms of intervention have not been successful...or we might be ethically obligated to do it.

What is Document?

400

This term was (re-)introduced later in the training, where we discussed ways of reimagining how we respond to issues of abuse, violence, and harassment, and how it can be about community care rather than merely punishment.

What is Accountability?

500

According to most recent research, __ in __ workers have experienced violence or harassment in Canada.

What is 7 in 10?

500
This acronym defines "consent" in an easy-to-remember way and emphasizes that it's not as easy as "yes" or "no." 

Hint: it's also a popular side/snack at a fast food restaurant!

What is FRIES?

500

This term was depicted in the training as half a wheel to help us understand how our intervention might result in only incremental change, but that managing our expectations can make sure our actions are still meaningful and important.

What is the Spectrum of Allyship?

500

When we discussed inclusive workplaces and their positive impacts, a study demonstrated that having this term/approach integrated more readily into the workplace resulted in more profit, more productivity, more creativity, and improved adaptability to problems.

What is Diversity?

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