The campus sexual assault crisis has drawn national attention in recent weeks, with the Obama administration and members of Congress pressing colleges and universities to crack down. But a group of activists is taking matters further, pressuring the Princeton Review, the nation’s most influential test prep and college admissions guide, to include the number of reported sexual assaults on campus in its annual ranking of colleges and universities
Some 200 rape survivors have signed a letter to the Princeton Review, while more than 36,000 members of the activist group UltraViolet signed a similar petition last week.
“Our members are making phone calls to Princeton Review to demand action,” said Nita Chaudhary, the co-founder of UltraViolet, the group who began the original petition. “We’ve logged over 700 phone calls, are very active on social media and are planning online advertising to target Princeton Review and from there we’ll see.”
There is also a growing movement, though disorganized for now, to persuade donors and alumni to withhold contributions to colleges or universities until the schools show progress in combating the sexual assault epidemic.
With alarming new research showing that one in five college women will be victims of sexual assault or attempted assault, the White House has released the names of 55 colleges and universities under federal investigation for their handling of sexual assault complaints. Some of the schools are globally known, like Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Southern California. While survivors applaud the move, they are looking for other high-profile ways to alert the public – and prospective college students – about the problems plaguing many campuses.
Jessica Skolnik is one of the rape survivors pushing for the Princeton Review to take action.
Skolnik was an 18-year-old freshman at Wisconsin’s Beloit College in 1997 when she was raped by an acquaintance. She didn’t alert campus authorities until five weeks after the incident, when she learned she was pregnant. The counselor she met with suggested mediation.
The counselor “wanted me to sit in a room with [my rapist] and talk it out,” Skolnik said. “This wasn’t something that could be talked out. It was a total shock to my system. I just wanted it to go away. It was so traumatizing.”
Skolnik opted out of the rape investigation after one mediation session where she was forced to sit face-to-face with her attacker. She’d planned to terminate her pregnancy but ended up miscarrying. Skolnik left Beloit and transferred to a college in Baltimore where she started a support group for survivors of sexual assault.
The Princeton Review issued a statement Thursday to msnbc saying that they feel the “campus safety” portion of their website is adequate and adds there are links to give information on each school’s safety record.
But a review by msnbc of the Princeton Review website appears to contradict that statement. Of the 378 colleges and universities listed as “best” by the Review, 131 had broken links to campus security information or had no links at all. Fifty-one of the links take users to a web page unrelated to campus safety.









