Rights and Responsibilities Relative to Relationships with Students

Belmont’s faculty and staff have the right and, in many cases, even the responsibility to maintain congenial relationships of a professional nature with students. Such relationships often enhance the educational processes of the university.

The university also recognizes that faculty and staff have a right to have personal relationships with their students that are mutually desired. Such relationships can also occur between faculty and staff supervisors and those who report to them.

However, members of the faculty and staff must avoid any conduct with Belmont students or other Belmont employees that would constitute immoral conduct on the part of the faculty or staff member, or would represent a professional conflict of interest for the employee (e.g., dating a student who is in one’s class; dating a person that one supervises).

Romantic relations between faculty members and students or supervisors and those who report to them do not necessarily involve sexual harassment. However, the power faculty members exercise in evaluating students’ work, awarding grades, providing recommendations and the like will generally constrain a student’s actual freedom to choose whether to enter into a romantic relationship with a faculty member. Similarly, the power supervisors exercise over the terms and conditions of their subordinate’s employment will constrain the employee’s freedom of choice. Where such power differentials exist, it may be exceedingly difficult to defend against a charge of sexual harassment on the grounds that the relationship was consensual. In internal proceedings, the university generally will be unsympathetic to a defense based on consent when the facts establish that the accused had the power to affect the complainant’s academic or employment status or future prospects. Even genuinely consensual relationships between faculty or staff and students and between supervisors and those who report to them may be problematic. For example, they may result in favoritism or perceptions of favoritism that adversely affect the learning or work environment. Consensual relationships involving a power differential, therefore, may violate university policy and equal opportunity law. All university employees are expected to exercise good judgment and avoid such relationships. Failure to exercise good judgment may result in disciplinary action such as formal reprimand or suspension, or depending on the gravity and nature of the incident, it may be cause for discharge.