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Chapter 4: Violence Against Women Question 1 Your boss…
Chapter 4: Violence Against Women
Question 1
Your boss offers to take you out on a date after work to talk about the possibility of a promotion. He asks you to wear something sexy for the date, indicating that doing so would increase your chance of getting promoted. What type of sexual harassment are you experiencing?
Question 1 options:
Hostile work environment
Aggravated employment
“insinuated” harassment
“suggestive” harassment
Quid pro quo harassment
Question 2
Your colleague has posted pictures of scantily clad women in suggestive poses in the staff lunch room. This constitutes what form of sexual harassment?
Question 2 options:
Quid pro quo harassment
“suggestive” harassment
Hostile work environment
“insinuated” harassment
Aggravated employment
Question 3
Unwanted sexual attention that interferes with daily life in a work or educational environment is:
Question 3 options:
Illegal in Canada
Unheard of in Canada
Frowned upon in Canada
Ignored in Canada
Tolerated in Canada
Question 4
According to research, most violent stalkers are those who:
Question 4 options:
Have had prior criminal convictions of stalking
Had previous intimate relations with their victims
Have drinking problems
Have childhood histories of abuse
Have had prior criminal convictions of any kind
Question 5
If it occurs without consent, which of the following is considered a sexual assault?
Question 5 options:
Vaginal or oral penetration
Kissing
Vaginal penetration
Fondling
Any form of sexual activity without consent constitutes a sexual assault
Question 6
As defined by the Criminal Code of Canada, a person cannot consent to sexual activity if s/he:
Question 6 options:
Has been repeatedly asked to consent
Is more than 2 years younger than the person seeking consent
Has a mental health issue
Speaks a language different from the person seeking consent
Is drunk
Question 7
It is well documented that victims of sexual assault often blame:
Question 7 options:
The pornography industry
Themselves
The legal system
Family and friends
Their attackers
Question 8
For victims of sexual assault, self-blame has been linked to:
Question 8 options:
Question 9 (1 point)
Which of the following factors affects the impact of sexual assault?
Question 9 options:
Responses to the attack by police
The impact of sexual assault is always the same: severe and long-term maladjustment
Time of day assault occurred
Whether victims reactions were immediate or delayed
Grooming methods used by the attacker
Question 10 (1 point)
It is particularly true for which type of victim that they risk losing their jobs when they report their victimization?
Question 10 options:
Sexual assault
Stalking
Sexual harassment
Criminal harassment
PTSD
Chapter 5: Family Violence
Question 11 (1 point)
In defining ‘family violence’ and its effects on people of all socio-economic classes, ages, sexual orientations, and gender, the author cautions us to keep in mind that the most frequently and severely injured are:
Question 11 options:
Pets
Women
Grandparents
Children
Men
Question 12 (1 point)
The Department of Justice Canada defines what term as ‘the violence or mistreatment that a woman or a man may experience at the hands of a marital, common-law or same-sex partner’?
Question 12 options:
Intimate partner violence
Woman abuse
Intimate terrorism
Family Violence
Spousal abuse
Question 13 (1 point)
Spousal abuse heightens at which stage of the relationship:
Question 13 options:
The couple is beginning the relationship
The couple is expecting their first baby
When the couple enters the “empty nest” stage
The couple buys their first home
The relationship is breaking down or ending
Question 14 (1 point)
During pregnancy, an abused woman:
Question 14 options:
Is at minimal risk of injury
Is at a reduced risk of continued violence
Is at greater risk of continued violence
Enjoys a reprieve from violence
Leaves her abuser
Question 15 (1 point)
Which of the following victim-blaming questions is very commonly asked when discussing the issue of spousal violence?
Question 15 options:
Are you safe?
What happened to him?
Why doesn’t she leave?
How can I help?
Why doesn’t he stop?
Question 16 (1 point)
Being of victim of family violence will impact:
Question 16 options:
Mental health
Mood
Every aspect of a person’s life
Performance at work or school
Physical health
Question 17 (1 point)
In terms of the impact of family violence, abused women frequently explain that:
Question 17 options:
Their male partners often suffer worse physical injuries
The emotional impact can be worse than the physical violence
The experience of being battered usually toughens women up
The physical consequences are less severe than people imagine
Their number one worry is that they will eventually kill their husbands
Question 18 (1 point)
When an abused woman leaves an abusive relationship:
Question 18 options:
She becomes abusive to the children
It solves everything
She and the children live happily ever after
New difficulties unfold in the home and at school
The abuser accepts her choice
Question 19 (1 point)
In terms of elder abuse:
Question 19 options:
Leaving the abusive relationship is easier since older people have more access to resources
The signs of abuse are better detected since the elderly tend to more actively seek medical attention
Only the elderly living with their adult children are susceptible to abuse because they are dependent on others of all aspects of their care
Age exacerbates vulnerability because many elderly adults have diminished resilience and strength
The problem is less hidden; the issue of elder abuse is better understood than other forms of abuse
Question 20 (1 point)
For a senior, there is a fear that reporting that they are being abused by a caregiver in the home may lead to:
Question 20 options:
Alzheimer’s
Weight loss
Forced institutionalization
The children being taken away
Bankruptcy
Chapter 6: Violence in Same-Sex Relationships
Question 21 (1 point)
In terms of research, support, and advocacy in addressing and responding to same-sex domestic violence, Hester and Donovan (2009) have noted that to date there has been a strong tendency to:
Question 21 options:
Anchor policies on the basis of models relating to violence in heterosexual relationships
Develop counseling programs specific to same-sex couples
Minimize, hide, and deny the existence of such abuse
Allocate money to research the extent of such abuse
Prioritize efforts to advocate for victims
Question 22 (1 point)
When comparing intimate partner violence among heterosexual and same-sex relationships, Wise and Brown (1997) found that:
Question 22 options:
The differences between heterosexual and homosexual abusive relationships are greater than the similarities
There is absolutely no difference at all between homosexual and heterosexual abusive relationships
Violence in heterosexual relationships tends to be more severe and injurious than violence in homosexual relationships
The similarities between heterosexual and homosexual abusive relationships are greater than the differences
Comparing violence among heterosexual and same-sex relationship is like comparing apples and oranges
Question 23 (1 point)
Researchers have found that the main theme distinguishing heterosexual abusive relationships and homosexual abusive relationships is fear of _______________ among homosexual couples.
Question 23 options:
Poverty
Child-protection agencies
Anti-gay discrimination
Violence escalation
Victim-blaming
Question 24 (1 point)
Which of the following is the third largest health problem experienced by gay men?
Question 24 options:
Hate crimes
Domestic violence
Borderline Personality Disorder
Substance abuse
AIDS
Question 25 (1 point)
Which of the following circumstances contributes to jealousy and codependency and is more evident among lesbian relationships due to their isolated nature?
Question 25 options:
Humiliation
Internalized homophobia
Heterosexism
Social fusion
Anti-gay discrimination
Question 26 (1 point)
Clinicians and therapists working with GLBT clients or couples should be mindful that:
Question 26 options:
The client is likely struggling with other mental health issues, most notably substance abuse
The client may resist being tested for HIV
The client may not identify with or use the same political or clinical language to define “violence”
The client probably witnessed domestic violence as a child
The client is likely struggling with gender identity disorder
Question 27 (1 point)
Threatening to “out” someone is a form of:
Question 27 options:
Identity abuse
Homophobia
Sexual harassment
Internalized homophobia
Verbal abuse
Question 28 (1 point)
Marc Hall took the Durham Catholic School Board to court for:
Question 28 options:
Teaching that homosexuality is “unnatural”
Inciting hatred of gays in front of a ‘captive audience’
Denying his right to education on the grounds of his sexual orientation
Failing to protect him from the homophobia of his peers
Violating his right to bring a same-sex date to his prom
Question 29 (1 point)
Gender stereotyping holds that male victims of same-sex domestic violence should:
Question 29 options:
Leave their abusers
Run away
Use reason and talk it out
Call police
Simply be a man and fight back
Question 30 (1 point)
The majority of studies on same-sex intimate violence have focused on:
Question 30 options:
Transsexual relationships
Gay relationships
Bisexual relationships
Transgendered relationships
Lesbian relationships
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