Carolina does sexual assault prevention training as part of orientation, although athletes have their own specific orientation system. Here's the relevant section from the Carolina athlete orientation website...
Prior to the start of the fall semester, Athletics holds Heel Camp which all student-athletes attend. During Heel Camp, student-athletes receive information from individuals and departments that will work with them throughout the year (ie Nutrition, ASPSA, Honor System, Strength & Conditioning) and additional topics are covered including scooter safety and sexual assault prevention training.
apsa.unc.edu
I can absolutely guarantee you that this training covers consent and taking/sending/receiving video/pictures.
This is a good point. I hadn't really thought about that training, because from what I understand, those orientations are often blown off and generally not taken seriously. But that is a choice one makes, and the student who blows off the sexual assault prevention training can't then later claim ignorance. That said:
1. That blurb does not give me a lot of confidence that the issues are properly addressed. Apparently the most important thing is to receive information about various people or departments who will help them improve their athletic performance. Also, they talk about some other stuff, like scooter safety and sexual assault.
The idea that scooter safety is put on the same level as sex assault training -- I mean, I hope that's just inartful writing on the web page. If the Heel Camp is really putting approximately the same emphasis on those two topics, then heads should roll and not ZH's. I mean, they can't do that, right? That can't be reality, right?
2. I asked my son about this and he gave me a surprising answer: it's not uncommon for guys to film their sex encounters because they think it will help them defend against rape allegations. One of the fraternities apparently has a camera system installed to record like 5 different rooms for this purpose. I asked my son if he told anyone about it. He said he didn't because he didn't know it for sure; he heard it from one of the guys on his rocket team who was in the frat. [incidental note: he's going to the Mojave desert on Sunday for two weeks as they finish constructing their rocket and launch it into outer space. Wild]
This sounds too real to me, and if so it triggers for me a longstanding frustration with sexual assault trainings and what have you. They do not need to be complicated. I remember hearing about one training for freshmen when I was teaching. The hypo was something like, "woman is drunk; woman agrees to have sex; while dude is putting on his condom, woman passes out; can the dude still proceed."
If it was up to me, these trainings would be radically streamlined. There's only one principle that anyone needs: if you are not 100% sure that your "partner" actively wants to be having sex, then don't. She's pretty drunk and she's stumbling around and is she able to consent-- fuck that. Are you 100% sure she wants to have sex? That she's not just drunk? Then don't. What if she strips naked, talks about riding a guy cowgirl and as he's putting on his condom, she says maybe we should wait until tomorrow? Fuck that. Are you 100% sure she wants to? Then don't.
3. Let me go further. Any training about "consent" given to a bunch of horny teenage dudes is likely to be interpreted by some of them as a roadmap. Teaching them not to cross the line of consent is also implicitly teaching that it's OK to push close to that line. As long as she consents, it's OK -- that's a lesson for a 30 year old (and perhaps dubious in that context). Not a lesson for a college freshman. The slogan shouldn't be "no means no" (which I'm not criticizing; it comes from an era when sadly that lesson was needed because Hollywood seemed committed for so long to the opposite); it should be "only if you're SURE."
So if athletes are recording their sex encounters for fear of being accused of rape, that strikes me as an indictment of the whole system. If you're worried that she might report you, don't fuck her and record it. Tell her to leave. Get to know her better. Explore her sexuality as something more than being a receptacle for yours.
This is going way beyond ZH's situation. It's a pet peeve of mine, you might say.