I was just thinking that most of this thread seems to assume same sex attraction doesn’t exist. Frankly I think most co-ed bathrooms that were built to be co-ed have more privacy than single sex bathrooms. Modesty is a personal thing and should be supported but be careful about making inaccurate assumptions about what best allows for modesty.
@yourmomma, but it not an issue that my daughter is concerned about, so why is it my responsibility to care about it?
@yourmomma, “guys are gross” is your opinion. It is not a fact.
Or there’s this, LOL…
A school in England knocked down the walls to it’s bathrooms so the entire bathrooms are open to the hallways.
Edited. I found the thread. Note that one boys who spoke up for a wish for a male-only bathroom was shouted down and called names.
http://talk.qa.collegeconfidential.com/parents-forum/1397313-gender-neutral-bathrooms-anyone.html
And the name of this college might be???
Hard to wrap my brain around that this is common today. My (college age) kids don’t even want to be in the bathroom or walking around in a towel in front of siblings, much less strangers. Co-ed baths/showers are just not ok with strangers.
Sorry, call me old-fashioned. I don’t think that this only applies to religious families either. Privacy issues are a big deal in many families.
“Roycroftmom: Or students may not be comfortable stating that they would prefer single sex bathrooms. In a similar way that many students may really prefer not to have overnight guests of the other gender staying in their dorm room, but are not comfortable saying that to their roommate. For some, it is a non-issue. For others, it is. And no, it doesn’t necessarily have to do with sex”
This!
^This is what our voices are for. There are many, many things a student may not like about how a roommate, or hall-mate, or classmate, behaves. These can not all be “legislated” out of existence. The student should express her/himself at the first hall meeting that they want an option of a single sex bathroom somewhere in the building (this is not unreasonable, and is, in my experience, ALWAYS available). She/he should tell her roommate that overnight guests are not appreciated. She should tell her labmate that dirty jokes are unwelcome. etc. etc. etc.
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- Guys having a conversation while sitting on the john doing no. 2.
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I know women who do that/have done that. And not just one or two.
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- Stubble in the sink.
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I live with two guys. My hair from the hair brush and eyebrows are way more common than their stubble.
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- Realizing there is more than one person in the shower.
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This happens in all men and all women bathrooms. I know because I’ve been involved in both situations.
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- Girl doing no 1 with a guy in the bathroom.
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Everybody pees.
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- Guys doing no 1 with the door open.
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This is just disrespectful.
I’ve lived with a lot of men and women. A lot. My house is basically a never ending cycle of people in need moving in and out. Gender/sex and cleanliness/respectfulness has no correlation.
@blossom, if you are asking me, I don’t believe that the name was confirmed in the thread. I think it may have been Pomona, but I wouldn’t swear to it.
In that particular case, if you read the first page or so of posts, apparently what happened was that in this kid’s coed dorm they had 3 bathrooms per floor, with a 60/40 F/M split. Students were allowed to vote on bathroom assignment–after everyone moved in. A minority of males who preferred a male-only bathroom were over-ruled by the majority, so that ALL of the bathrooms in the dorm became either female-only or gender neutral. The OP’s kid and some others were actually walking to another building to use a males-only bathroom.
IMNSHO that was outrageous. They could have easily allotted at least one bathroom in the entire dorm to guys without burdening anyone else.
I’ve mentioned this previously in the early pages of this thread, but at the schools we toured, mainly LACs, that had coed bathrooms, the procedure was that students vote via secret ballot and any one voice voting nay to coed bathrooms meant the bathrooms weren’t coed or there was at least an option of some not being coed. Therefore, no one was forced into it against there will or because they were outvoted or afraid to speak up. It was often mentioned that frequently when students voted again at the beginning of the next semester, all the votes were yes votes and those that might have had an issue about it at the beginning of the school year became comfortable with it a semester later.
The tyranny of the majority… But meh. Walking to another building is not the end of the world, particularly in Claremont where winter is like spring and fall back east. And I suspect what they really meant was different wing since many of the dorms there have multiple wings. When I was in college my particular dorm still had group showers with no stalls. I walked to a different wing and floor where they had upgraded to stalls with curtains. I lived. I wasn’t scarred for life. These are college kids – it wouldn’t do them harm to have a little hardship and trade offs they have the deal with. They could be living with 5 strange roommates in a roach infested walk-up and a tiny communal bathroom that doesn’t work half the time when they graduate (for those who actually go out on their own and not home).
@Consolation OP does state it isn’t Pomona later in the thread. When I started around that time (2012), one of the first discussions that my sponsor group (community of 15-20 first years + 2-3 sophomores who live together in a hall) had was whether to designate bathrooms as gender-inclusive or leave them gendered. If even one person wanted a gendered bathroom, we’d do so- no shaming or dissent or questioning anything. All of us unanimously agreed to keep them gender-inclusive, but if there were any issues of comfort later, we could change it (ultimately, we didn’t, we were all discreet and clean).
There were other sponsor groups that did vote to have designated bathrooms. You would walk through different halls and see the voted system at work. Yes, there were bathrooms separate for men- it wasn’t just “women” and “gender neutral”. I have never heard of any controversy on this point in my time at Pomona- if there ever were reactions as vocal and hostile as described in OP’s thread, the whole school would have known!
I think the issue is a feeling a security from voyeurism, groping and assault. Here’s one UCB article that shows it happens: http://www.dailycal.org/2014/05/13/uc-berkeley-student-arrested-alleged-voyeurism-residence-hall-showers/
And the Crimson staff seems to agree: http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2011/2/11/bathrooms-genderneutral-harvard-harassment/
81% of sexual assaults on campus are reportedly happening in dorms: http://law.gsu.edu/2016/04/06/schools-dont-tell-campus-sexual-assault/
And on how much it stinks to not be able to go pee when you need to because you fear for your safety: https://thetab.com/us/ohio-state/2016/02/13/almost-eleventh-floor-experience-sexual-assault-658
Look, these are just a few little articles that I found after one minute of googling, and I’m sure I’m going to get pounced on here for this. I don’t support intellectual “safe spaces” and I believe in free speech. But I think it’s supremely naive to think that it’s all cool and good and everyone will just treat each other like brothers and sisters in the dorm. I would feel super uncomfortable showering knowing a group of men were standing outside the door. I imagine anyone who has been raped previously would be really uncomfortable about that as well. I’m sure you all will jump all over me for this, but to me it’s not a matter of cleanliness but safety. It would make my daughter and me both quite nervous to feel so vulnerable, and to have to do that on a daily basis would really suck. And I grew up with brothers, and have a son. I’m glad to hear that most schools put this to a vote, and that the majority can’t override the minority!
@nostalgicwisdom , thanks for the info. It did seem very un-Pomona-like to me!
@citivas I guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree. I do NOT think that it is a minor thing for kids to have to go to another building to use a bathroom in comfort when there are plenty available in their own dorm, and the OP of that thread said “building” not “wing,” so you don’t get to change it because it suits your views. I am almost 100% certain that you wouldn’t be so happy about it if it were girls who were cast out of their own dorm because they felt uncomfortable being needlessly forced to use bathrooms with men in them.
@ccprofandmomof2, I don’t want to jump on you, but I think the evidence you’ve provided, with the exception of the UCB piece, is weak. Granted, there were incidents of a student at UCB recording women in the shower. That’s clearly awful, but I’m not seeing evidence of a lot of other incidents. The other links you posted were to a seven year old editorial positing that non-gendered bathrooms might be a problem should they be installed at Harvard, a statistic about campus assaults that has nothing to do with gendered or non-gendered bathrooms, and an article that really has nothing to do with bathrooms at all. The girl in question wrote about being harassed by a drunk man on her way from the elevator to her dorm room.
I googled “woman assaulted in college bathroom.” The first 5 stories were:
- Riverside college student attacked in restroom, wields pencil - ...The student was washing her hands in a **women's restroom** in the Math/Science building when she looked behind her and saw the man,...
- Woman claims sexual assault at knife-point in hiking trail bathroom ... (no mention of whether the bathrooms are gendered or not)
- Campus security at Los Medanos College say a man wearing a black hoodie, black leather gloves and a bandana covering his most of his face sexually assaulted a woman in a bathroom Thursday night....The assault took place shortly after 9 p.m. in a **women’s bathroom** of the Main College Complex building, spokesman Tim Leong said.
- Police are asking for help identifying a woman wanted in connection with the assault and robbery of another woman in a San Joaquin Delta College bathroom...Police say a woman suspect entered the Holt building’s first floor **woman’s restroom** on the San Joaquin Delta College campus and slammed a victim against the wall.
- The Orange County Sheriff's Office is searching for man who attacked a woman in a Valencia College East Campus bathroom Tuesday night, deputies said....An unknown male entered a **women’s restroom** and attempted to sexually batter a female student.
So 4 assaults in women’s bathrooms, 1 where there is no mention of whether the bathroom was gendered or not. Not one in a bathroom identified as gender neutral.
I agree that it’s not a small thing to have to go to a bathroom in another dorm and that the voting system used in the case of the student in the other thread wasn’t fair, but I have to wonder this- When scores of people have given testimony on recent threads to the fact that their dorms had coed bathrooms and it really wasn’t a problem and we have to go back 6 years to find a thread where a single person said it was, does it not say something about the chances that OP’s kid would find coed bathrooms to be…not a problem?
@Sue22 So you’ll grant the voyeurism, but not assault as a possibility? And voyeurism isn’t that bad, after all, since women have to submit to it everywhere else, so they might as well have to worry about it in the bathroom too. I’m sorry, but that’s not how I see it. We’ll have to agree to disagree. And as I noted in my post, I wasn’t trying to offer a comprehensive literature review–just going a quick google search. My mistake. All your links prove is that women get assaulted a lot. I don’t see that as undermining my argument. Quite the contrary.
I actually think the chances of being assaulted are greater in a bathroom labeled women only than one open to all genders. I also think that if there’s a vote and one person wants a single sex bathroom in the building it should be provided - going to another building is not an acceptable option.
What’s funny is while I didn’t mind mixed gendered bathrooms in college - which had changing areas attached to the showers - I really hate the fact that so many women bring boys (who are clearly over six years old), into the adult women’s locker room at our Y. (They are supposed to use the kid’s locker rooms.)