Home
   
   
Sunday, 22 November 2009
 
Your Voice
What form of travel do you plan on taking for the holiday break?
 






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Rape Aggression Defense System kicks into gear
Tuesday, 09 September 2008

by BRITTANY PENLAND
News Reporter


Kicks, blocks and punches are all a part of the schedule for the Rape Aggression Defense System classes offered for women at Appalachian State University this fall.

The first session will begin Sept. 15 in the Bernhardt Room at the Broyhill Inn & Conference Center.

Classes will be held from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. and will meet once a week for four weeks.

Sophomore technical photography major Anita L. Tingle strikes a Kokutsu-Dachi back stance in Shotokan Karate. Appalachian State University police will be offering courses teaching basic self-defense techniques. Photo by Holt Menzies
 

Second session courses will begin Oct. 29.

“[Women] are going to learn a lot of skills, they are going to [gain] a lot of knowledge, not just about strikes and kicks, but a lot of mental knowledge as well as physical knowledge,” University Police

Detective and RAD instructor L. Darrin Tolbert said.

RAD classes are designed to teach women self-defense techniques and martial art skills, said Tolbert.

Each session is taught by one of six certified RAD instructors.

There is a $10 registration fee, which includes the 12-hour course, a student manual, a RAD t-shirt, and a lifetime return and practice policy, Tolbert said.

“A lot of women don’t know how to defend themselves and are not strong enough to defend themselves so taking a [self-defense class] is important,” sophomore accounting major Brittany A. Halsey said.

The first night of class, students will start with bookwork and discussions about awareness.

Then, instructors will lead a warm-up and begin teaching basic striking skills, Tolbert said.

“It’s basic knowledge that you should have, but we just try to instill on our students about not being alone, not walking alone after dark, not leaving parties by yourself, not leaving parties with strangers and using the buddy system,” Tolbert said.

He said the last night of the course is called “fight night” where instructors wear suits called “red man suits” and act as potential attackers.

Tolbert said students particularly enjoy the last night of the class.

“It’s no holds barred—[students] kick, they punch, and I’m so sore the next day that I can hardly move, but I love it,” he said.

The RAD courses are sponsored by University Police, Tolbert said.

This year is the 10th year Appalachian has held self-defense courses.

“They were looking for a self-defense class for women and they came across the RAD System,” Tolbert said. “It’s a nationally recognized course.”

According to the University Police annual crime report, there were two reported forcible sex offenses on campus in 2007 as well as 24 burglaries and 142 larcenies.

On a national level, according to the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network Web site, college- age women are four times more likely to be sexually assaulted.

In the United States, every two minutes someone is sexually assaulted, according to the Web site.

“Women are often a lot more vulnerable than they think they are, and taking a self-defense class heightens the awareness that women constantly need to be prepared to handle dangerous situations,” junior political science major Anna M. Cardwell said.

Registration for spring semester defense classes will begin early next semester.

Students interested are advised to register as soon as possible because classes fill quickly.
Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
 

Advertisement

 

© Copyright 1996 - 2008 The Appalachian | theapp.appstate.edu
Advertise with the ASU Student Media