Opinion We need an official trigger warning policy for class content

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OPINION: We need an official trigger warning policy for class content​

The material taught in any college course can contain triggering or just disturbing content. Whether you are in a psychology class discussing mental disorders or a film studies class watching a movie with characters struggling in any capacity, it’s important that professors realize class material can trigger students and induce effects like anxiety, PTSD or worsened mental health overall. Therefore, trigger warnings need to be adopted into course curriculums and descriptions to ensure students' mental health is not accidentally negatively impacted.

I’ve had countless conversations with friends and fellow classmates throughout college about how upsetting or even triggering class content can be. For example, I remember being in one of my lower level Spanish courses and watching a short film about a woman who was having a pretty intense existential crisis and wondering why we were watching such heavy content for a homework assignment.

I’ve also heard many students talk about how they’ll purposefully avoid watching or reading a lot of their class material in efforts to keep their mental health more stable. This is especially true for majors like social work, psychology, sociology or others that involve an abundance of discussion surrounding serious societal issues. However, the need for trigger warnings applies to every major as I, a communication media and Spanish double major, have also experienced being upset or disturbed by class content in a wide range of classes.

There are certainly some professors who make an effort to provide trigger warnings for their students in order to protect their mental health, but the fact that there is no requirement or official policy makes this issue an urgent one to say the least. With our University student population sitting at 37,556 and reportedly 73% of all college students experiencing some sort of mental health crisis during college, it’s clear trigger warnings have become increasingly necessary.

For students who are experiencing mental health issues, whatever they may be, disturbing or depressing class material is the furthest thing from what they need to be consuming mentally.

Even for students who aren’t actively experiencing issues with their mental health, it’s important to note that class content can still be quite upsetting. I know I’ve left class still thinking about some rather disturbing material that may not have ruined my day or caused me prolonged anxiety, but still affected my mood significantly enough to have appreciated a trigger warning. Especially as someone who cares a lot about mental health but does not like to discuss it in extensive detail, I think trigger warnings would be beneficial for all students.

According to Merriam-Webster dictionary, a trigger warning is defined to be a statement cautioning that content (as in a text, video or class) may be disturbing or upsetting. That being said, it would be a rather simple task for professors to provide trigger warnings within class content. This could be done in the syllabus, in class powerpoints, really any way possible that can reach students.

Not only would this help avoid worsening students' mental health by giving them the warning to mentally prepare to watch or read the content, but also give them the option to not do so if necessary.

I will never forget my introduction to psychology professor from freshman year at NC State telling us in advance the following week’s content would contain disturbing photos and explanations of distressing disorders, so if we were to use our free absences at any time, we should do so then if we think it would be too much to handle. I greatly appreciated this as someone who finds many mental health issues difficult to talk or hear about, simply because I find them upsetting and sometimes scary.

For students similar to me or students unfortunately experiencing mental health issues, trigger warnings should be implemented into all class material to try to hopefully improve students' overall mental health, not worsen it.
 
There are certainly some professors who make an effort to provide trigger warnings for their students in order to protect their mental health, but the fact that there is no requirement or official policy makes this issue an urgent one to say the least. With our University student population sitting at 37,556 and reportedly 73% of all college students experiencing some sort of mental health crisis during college, it’s clear trigger warnings have become increasingly necessary.
Pop psychology morons are attributing stress caused by

1. massive debt
2. moving away from family/friends to a new environment for the first time
3. entering a new environment filled with SJW fuckwits ready to pounce on every word
4. Drug/alcohol over consumption
5. shitty diets
6. shitty sleep
7. the realization that they have spent 4+ years of their lives and hundreds of thousands of dollars to get a worthless piece of paper

all onto the content that is taught in classes....

Fuck me this is beyond just base stupidity and is just flat out people actively tricking themselves into being stupid to avoid reality.
 
Considering humans have survived and thrived without trigger warnings, my feeling on trigger warnings is FUCK YOUR TRIGGER WARNINGS and if that triggers you, good.

I’ve had countless conversations with friends and fellow classmates throughout college about how upsetting or even triggering class content can be.

This demonstrates that the person who wrote the article in the OP is a total fucking nutcase.

If at any point in time I would have tried to say to my friends or classmates in college "I find some of this content triggering" they would have looked at me like I was completely retarded and then laughed at me.
 
OPINION: We need an official trigger warning policy for degrees and universities

If students realize majoring in gender studies will force them to face rape culture, maybe they'll choose something more analytical and less traumatic, like geology.

If students realize that due to liberal arts requirements, even geology majors at School A will have to look at FGM or study slavery, maybe they'll choose to study at School B, which has no such requirements.
 
For all their whining about appropriation, they really like to appropriate shit about mental illness.

People with actual PTSD - who have experienced LIFE AND DEATH situations - can be triggered by anything. I mean, anything. The smell of a certain cologne, a song, fireworks, a word, a model of car. You can’t trigger warning real life for real PTSD. PTSD flashbacks & panic attacks aren’t comparable to mild, manageable “anxiety” you get from reading a sad story or mean words.

If you need trigger warnings, you do not belong in a classroom. You belong on a mental ward.
 
These people should be careful what they wish for. While the "SJW snowflake" stories are the biggest headline-grabbers, the biggest users of institutionalized trigger warning policies are actually conservative Christians who demand trigger warnings and opt-outs on gay content.
The moral for all sides: never invent a tool you wouldn't want to hand to your enemy.
 
If you cant handle what is being taught, how are you going to confront the real thing? What will you do when the 17 year old girl tells you she was raped by her father? Will you accuse her of being insensitive and hide behind your desk?
 
I remember years ago, future lawyers going through law school pitched a bitch about trigger warnings in Criminal Law cases. No sense of "You may be practicing this, so better get used to it pussy." But they were probably all hoping to go to NGOs and be immigration lawyers.
 
Every time I hear this topic brought up, I'm left wondering what kind of college these people go to? From the way they talk, you'd think that the professors don't tell you ANYTHING about the class or topic before discussing it. You're just minding your business, discussing something mundane, when BAM! Suddenly, you're talking about how John Doe just jumped out of the bushes and raped someone.

That's not my experience at all. Every class I had, you were given a syllabus on the first day of class. This clearly tells you about the class, and it included the topics you were going to discuss, as well as what books you'd be reading etc. And every time we had to talk about something that was disturbing, violent, sexual, etc., the professors would warn the class ahead of time. Isn't that enough?
 
That's not my experience at all. Every class I had, you were given a syllabus on the first day of class. This clearly tells you about the class, and it included the topics you were going to discuss, as well as what books you'd be reading etc. And every time we had to talk about something that was disturbing, violent, sexual, etc., the professors would warn the class ahead of time. Isn't that enough?
No one reads the syllabus. Professors have placed instructions on how to claim a monetary prize in their syllabus, only for the prize to remain unclaimed by the end of the semester.
 
I agree. And we should make sure parents have access to those content/trigger warnings so they know what is being taught in their child's class.

Oh, I am being told that is fascist and racist. Carry on.
 
I was triggered by the trigger warning! Now we need a trigger warning trigger warning!
 
For all their whining about appropriation, they really like to appropriate shit about mental illness.

People with actual PTSD - who have experienced LIFE AND DEATH situations - can be triggered by anything. I mean, anything. The smell of a certain cologne, a song, fireworks, a word, a model of car. You can’t trigger warning real life for real PTSD. PTSD flashbacks & panic attacks aren’t comparable to mild, manageable “anxiety” you get from reading a sad story or mean words.
This. Sick of people conflating mild discomfort with PTSD and panic attacks.

I an sympathetic to people who actually suffer from either condition, but I view triggers as being like allergies - it is your responsibility to be aware and prepare, not the world’s. If you know that there is something that genuinely would cause a panic attack - ask to be excused or whatever, ask your teacher to let you have a specific gesture if you need to bail so you can do it without attracting too much attention - but it’s your responsibility to know it’s a problem.

And again, stage fright and disgust are not the same as a panic attack.
 
it’s important that professors realize class material can trigger students and induce effects like anxiety, PTSD or worsened mental health overall.
PTSD isn't dealt with by avoiding. It's dealt with by confronting.

People with actual PTSD - who have experienced LIFE AND DEATH situations - can be triggered by anything. I mean, anything. The smell of a certain cologne, a song, fireworks, a word, a model of car. You can’t trigger warning real life for real PTSD. PTSD flashbacks & panic attacks aren’t comparable to mild, manageable “anxiety” you get from reading a sad story or mean words.
And this. Very very much this.

I know someone who gets triggered by women's perfume sometimes because he associates it with the aunt that was driving the car that they wrecked in when he lost his leg.

He doesn't demand every woman he meets go without perfume. He carries Vicks in his pocket.
 
This. Sick of people conflating mild discomfort with PTSD and panic attacks.

I an sympathetic to people who actually suffer from either condition, but I view triggers as being like allergies - it is your responsibility to be aware and prepare, not the world’s. If you know that there is something that genuinely would cause a panic attack - ask to be excused or whatever, ask your teacher to let you have a specific gesture if you need to bail so you can do it without attracting too much attention - but it’s your responsibility to know it’s a problem.

And again, stage fright and disgust are not the same as a panic attack.
I mean in a college class you can just bail whenever you want any way, you're not a child, you don't need to raise your hand and ask for permission to go take a shit.
 
Or, stop being such namby pampy wussies! All these coddled people need to grow a thicker skin. You're going to be exposed to things you might find uncomfortable, the entire world shouldn't have to treat you with kid gloves and walk around on eggshells to protect your fee-fees. And people wonder why I've enjoyed the whole pandemic isolation, don't have to deal with over emotional, triggered people who can't figure out their gender.
 
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