A structured educational program to understand, recognize, and prevent sexual harassment in its different forms, with age-appropriate adaptations for individuals, couples, families, parents, and sons/daughters.
This 6-session educational program provides clear, respectful, and age-appropriate information about sexual harassment, how it can appear in everyday life, and what can be done to prevent it and respond safely.
The program explores different forms of sexual harassment, including verbal, non-verbal, digital, physical, public-space, educational, workplace, and social media contexts. It also focuses on boundaries, consent, assertive communication, digital safety, and help-seeking strategies.
The approach is educational and preventive. It is not legal advice and does not replace psychotherapy, emergency support, or specialized intervention. However, it is delivered from a professional, sensitive, and respectful perspective, adapted to the needs and age of the participants.
Who Is This For?
Individuals, couples, families, and parents with sons/daughters who want to better understand sexual harassment, prevent harmful situations, build respectful communication, and develop safer personal, relational, and digital boundaries. Content is adapted according to age, context, and participant needs.
6-Session Roadmap
Session 1 – What Is Sexual Harassment? Definitions & Myths
Clarify key concepts, define sexual harassment, distinguish flirting from harassment, and identify common myths, stereotypes, and misunderstandings.
Session 2 – Types of Sexual Harassment & Everyday Scenarios
Explore verbal, non-verbal, physical, and power-based forms of harassment in different contexts, such as public spaces, education, work, social settings, and relationships. Reflection on personal experiences is included only when safe and appropriate.
Session 3 – Digital Harassment & Online Safety
Understand how harassment can appear on social media, messaging apps, and digital platforms. Discuss pressure around sexual images, privacy, online boundaries, and basic digital safety strategies.
Session 4 – Boundaries, Consent & Assertive Communication
Work on personal boundaries, consent principles, how to say and respect “no,” and how to communicate limits clearly. Includes practical examples and role-play of assertive communication when appropriate.
Session 5 – What To Do If It Happens? Action Routes & Support
Explore common emotional reactions, first steps after an incident, informal and formal support options, and how parents, partners, or family members can respond in a supportive and non-blaming way.
Session 6 – Agreements & Prevention Plan
Create personalized safety and prevention plans, define family or couple agreements, identify support networks and resources, and review the key learnings from the program.
Expected Outcomes
By the end of the program, participants may gain:
- A clearer understanding of what sexual harassment is and what it is not
- Greater ability to recognize different forms of harassment in daily life and online
- Language and tools to set boundaries and express limits clearly
- Better understanding of consent, respect, and safe communication
- Knowledge of basic action routes and help-seeking options if harassment occurs
- In couples or families, shared agreements around respect, consent, boundaries, and digital safety
Professional Support
All sessions are conducted directly by the main specialist. A guest professional, such as a legal educator or prevention specialist, may be invited for one session only with prior consent from participants.
Prerequisites & Conditions
- For adolescents or minors, written consent from a parent or legal guardian is required
- For family or parent–child sessions, all participants must agree to respectful and non-violent communication
- This program is educational and does not replace individual psychotherapy, legal consultancy, emergency support, or specialized intervention
- Situations involving immediate risk of violence, abuse, or harm should be referred to emergency or specialized services
Included Materials & Support
Depending on the participants’ needs, the program may include:
- Handouts or PDFs explaining types of harassment, consent, and digital safety tips
- Reflection exercises and guided questions for individuals, couples, and families
- Templates for family or couple agreements around boundaries, respect, and digital use
- Lists of local and online resources, such as helplines, institutions, and support organizations, adapted to the relevant country


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