That's a great question.
I can only really speak to my campus in Edmonton, MacEwan University, which is actually quite rare in the things they're doing with a lot progressive and pilot programs that we're testing out this year.
I noted earlier when I was speaking that in part of our sexual violence education prevention committee, we've put forward a campaign called “No Place Here”. We identify a lot of key individuals within our institution trying to be thought leaders. If a student is walking down the hall and wants to come forward about anything, to ask any questions, we make sure we have the baseline education to refer them elsewhere or bring them to the resource experts.
In terms of young men on campus, right now we are working with community experts, our internal psychologists, internal legal counsel, and a lot of students around the table, and we're going to pilot—it's in a working stage right now—masculinity labs. We're going to bring in young male athletes alongside a lot of first-year students and some fourth-year students to kind of bridge the gap in the communication, as well as our faculty and our staff. It's an understanding that we all need to be on a baseline of learning where we don't separate our faculty and our staff and our students. We all come together as a collective.
This is going to bring forward conversations about masculinity myths and break into the area that hasn't been addressed for very long, which is talking to young men about what they're going through when they come on to campuses, and making sure they have the right education coming through the doors.