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Professor Kisses Students and Gets Caught

Hypocrisy

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爆料人:川美副教授强吻女生遇反抗未停

2014年10月13日 05:36 来源:新闻晨报 作者:舒晓程
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强吻女生

原标题:四川美院强吻女生副教授改口致歉

院方决定禁止当事人王小箭参加一切教学与学术活动,降低其退休待遇

□晨报记者舒晓程

10日晚,有网友发布三张照片,指四川美术学院副教授王小箭在吃饭时“性骚扰”两名年轻女性。对此,王小箭矢口否认。

11日,四川美术学院发出通告,对王小箭违反教师行为规范的行为作出了处理——决定禁止王小箭参加该校任何教学、科研和学术活动,并降低其退休待遇。

面对事实,王小箭昨日终于“松口”,公开道歉并“保证今后不再发生此类事件”。

被亲吻女性有反抗

10日晚,有网友发布了三张照片,直指四川美术学院副教授王小箭在吃饭时“性骚扰”两名年轻女性。根据照片显示,事发当时有一位头发花白的男子和两名女性一起在一家餐馆吃饭,男子坐在两名女性中间。在吃饭时,照片中的男子亲了他右边女性的脸部,还亲了左边女性的手。从画面中可以看到,其右边的那名女性在被亲吻时比较抵触,而男子是用两只手“捧”着女性的脑袋猛亲。

据上传照片的网友说,照片中的男性正是四川美术学院副教授王小箭,在吃饭的过程中,他多次对两名女性“动手动脚”,而女性有过反抗,但王小箭“一直没有停止”。

王小箭初次回应:没做错

照片一经流出,引起轩然大波。但王小箭11日回应称,他并不认为自己做错了。

王小箭解释道,当天有人带话说这两名女生要与他“交流”,因此约在一起吃饭,照片中的两位女生是与他“非常熟的学生”,他带着她们在网站实践。王小箭表示,自己平日带学生实践和交流的风格就是“连说带哄”,照片中的“亲吻”等行为,实质是在“哄”学生,是正常交流。此外,王小箭认为,自己已经退休,就不能算老师,而且两名女学生也不是他的研究生,所以不存在“师德”方面的探讨。至于“性骚扰”,王小箭更是矢口否认,他反倒认为外人将照片肆意在网上传播,对两位姑娘造成了伤害,还需要承担学校、女生、他的名誉损失。

记者了解到,王小箭是四川美院副教授,艺术批评家。1999年开始在四川美院任教,主要承担符号学、专业英语等课程教学,招收艺术学理论、美术学系、艺术管理方向的研究生。因到退休年龄,其从2013年12月31日起退休。

受处分后发出致歉信

事件发生后,位于重庆市的四川美术学院立即展开了调查,并于10月11日发布关于对退休教师王小箭违反教师行为规范调查处理的情况通报。

通报中指出,王小箭的行为严重违背了国家教育部、重庆市教委和学校有关教师师德师风的基本要求和行为准则,造成了严重的不良社会影响,败坏了教师声誉,损害了学校形象,之后禁止其参加学校任何教学、科研和学术活动,并根据国家和重庆市有关规定降低其退休待遇。

面对板上钉钉的事实,王小箭昨日对于自己的不雅行为“松口”,公布了一封手写的致歉信,“2014年10月10日晚,网上发表的图片情况属实,我本人酒后的失当行为是错误的,对此给当事人的伤害和对学校的影响深表歉意,就此说声对不起,并保证今后不再发生此类事件。”


 

Degree of intimacy

By Liu Sha Source: Global Times Published: 2014-10-23 20:33:01

New policy bans ‘improper’ student-teacher relationships in China’s universities

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Wang Xiaojian, a retired professor from the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in Chongqing, was photographed forcibly kissing two female students at a restaurant on October 13. Photo: 163.com

For those pursuing a doctorate or master's degree, reporting an academic advisor for sexual harassment could mean having to start a thesis from square one.

If a teacher is removed, punished or ousted publicly for sexual harassment, graduate students can face the lengthy process of finding another advisor and starting new research.

"So the best way is to pray that your advisor is a friendly and disciplined scholar," said Li Jiahua, a second-year doctoral student in Beijing.

China's Ministry of Education on October 9 issued a guideline "building sound mechanism of college teachers' ethics," which not only addresses sexual harassment laws, but also "improper" relationships between teachers and students.

This is the first time China's top education authority issued such a ban.

While the guideline does not define "improper relationships," analysts suggest the phrase implies an exchange of academic favors for sex - which has become an increasingly common occurrence on Chinese college campuses in recent years.

College teachers, especially professors with administrative positions, are able to entice college students with their ability to assign grades, allocate research funding and write recommendation letters.

"Academic fraud, corruption and lack of supervision of teachers in colleges are reasons behind the improper relationships and sexual harassment," Lao Kaisheng, an education expert at Beijing Normal University, told the Global Times.

Surprisingly, few Chinese universities have policies in place that clearly state teachers are not allowed to sexually harass students, said Lao.

"Teachers are seen as the representatives of knowledge and nobility in China."

But recent cases indicate that college teachers need supervision as much as other authorities.

Sexual history

The guideline promised sanctions for those who break the rules.

Wu Chunming, a history professor at Xiamen University in Fujian Province, was expelled from the Party and had his teaching qualifications revoked for abusing his position and having sex with female students.

The case, first exposed by an anonymous Sina Weibo user in July, became the subject of a nationwide debate.

Wu was accused of approaching numerous students with offers of thesis supervision and recommendations for postgraduate or doctoral studies.

During a three-month investigation, the doctoral advisor admitted to having sex with students but said he could not remember how many, reported the Fujian-based Strait Herald.

A student who claimed to have been sexually harassed by Wu later told Shanghai-based Dragon TV that Wu had asked her for sex while holding a condom in his office.

"I reported his behavior to school authorities, but they did not take action and Wu became more aggressive," the student said.

In another case, Wang Xiaojian, a retired art professor from the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in Chongqing, was photographed forcibly kissing two female students at a campus restaurant on October 13.

The photo went viral and was confirmed by the institute, which later denied the teacher of all benefits.

Li Furui, a women's rights activist in Xiamen, recently collected nearly 300 signatures petitioning Xiamen University to establish rules to prevent teaching personnel from sexually harassing students.

"I was surprised that so many came to me about their awful experiences," Li told the Global Times.

While a significant number of female students have been approached by professors at the school, few cases got reported. Many times, the student is either too embarrassed or the school, viewing their staff as assets, protects the teacher, Li said.

Under the guideline, colleges are permitted to determine their own policies on student-teacher relationships, said Wang Tianding, director of the journalism department of Xi'an International Studies University, who has also been pushing for a mechanism to prevent sexual harassment.

While teachers are often seen as taking advantage of students, many times it is the student that takes the initiative.

Love on campus

For many students and teachers, a formal date between adults does not constitute an "improper relationship."

A Chinese graduate student who is currently studying in Australia told the Global Times about her relationship experience with a professor in China.

"We were together and he helped me not only with my tests, grades and papers, but also wrote recommendations for my postgraduate application," said the student surnamed Huang.

Huang thought it was okay since "we did love each other" and the teacher was not married. Huang only began to feel uncomfortable when her teacher nominated her, rather than another more deserving student in her class, for a school scholarship.

"In fact, schools should also have policies prohibiting teachers dating students, as it often results in a conflict of interest," Wang said.

But most college teachers agreed that the new guideline does not apply to formal dates.

"They are trying to deal with coerced sex rather than the sincere love between two adults," a college teacher surnamed Chu at Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics told the Global Times.

Chu, however, is not optimistic with how effective the guideline will be. "Things won't change. Those who are afraid to report their teachers will still not report them, and those who want to exchange sex for benefits will still continue."

According to Lao's study, most cases of "improper relationships" and sexual harassment occur between thesis advisors and their students, especially those pursuing doctoral degrees, as those professors usually wield more power over the research funding and paper publishing necessary to advance a student's academic career.

"If [my thesis advisor's] reputation was tarnished or teaching qualifications were revoked, I might not be able to finish my degree. So even there is a policy banning that, I doubt the number of people would really speak up," Li, the PhD student, said.

All teachers interviewed by the Global Times said their universities do not have any regulations clearly banning student-teacher relationships.

The key to solving the problem lies in decentralizing teacher's power and building up a supervision system, said Xiong Bingqi, an education expert and vice president of the 21st Century Education Research Institute in Shanghai.

Students should be granted more rights to participate into school administration and teacher supervision, Xiong said.

Cao Siqi contributed to this story


 
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