Koestner Joins Stetson Students to Take Back the Night on April 11

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Katie Koestner is founder and executive director of the Take Back the Night Foundation.

On Wednesday, April 11, Katie Koestner, founder and executive director of the Take Back the Night Foundation, will present the keynote address at an event designed to empower victims and help end sexual violence and harassment.

Stetson University’s Take Back the Night event will begin with Koestner’s talk at 8 p.m. in McMahan Hall, 417 N. Woodland Blvd., in DeLand. Following the address, attendees will move to Stetson’s Palm Court for a speak out rally and candlelight moment of reflection. The event is free and open to the public.

“The theme of this year’s Take Back the Night event is ‘Shatter the Silence, End the Violence,’” said Cathy Downes, Stetson University’s executive director and Title IX coordinator. “Our hope is that attendees will feel empowered to speak up and to step up to change the current culture.”

During the speak out, individuals will be invited to share words of encouragement or support for victims, a relevant poem or personal experience as a person affected by sexual assault or harassment. The evening will close with a candlelight vigil and moment of quiet reflection for those affected.

Cover of Time magazine shows teenager katie koestner
Time magazine put Katie Koestner on the cover in 1991 after she spoke out about date rape, describing how she went on a date with a fellow college student a few weeks after beginning her first year at the College of William & Mary in Virginia, and was sexually assaulted in her dorm room.

The event is part of a campus-wide initiative to empower victims and end sexual violence. In the days leading up to the Take Back the Night event, student groups including PACT (Peer Advisory Council for Title IX), SASA (Students Against Sexual Assault), NOW (National Organization for Women), and WELL team (Wellness Educators for Lifelong Learning) will ask the community to make signs of support, sign a pledge to end sexual violence and provide general knowledge about sexual violence prevention, reporting and intervention.

Koestner is also president of Campus Outreach Services, a national organization dedicated to developing research-supported curricula, model policies and outstanding educational programs for schools on student risk issues. She has provided keynote speeches and programs for more than 2,000 schools across the country to raise awareness about the prevention and response to sexual and technology-related misconduct.

She is the co-author of two books on sexual assault policy and procedures for schools and the creator of “Responding to Sexual Misconduct: A Customizable Training Manual for Schools.” She is credited with convincing the world you could be raped by your date. Koestner’s speaking career began at age 18 shortly after her own personal experience. Her dedication and vision have been the source of program development and policy change on both the community and national levels.

-Heather Hunter