Class sex toy demonstration causes controversy

Prof. John Michael Bailey defends demonstration as educational

By Patrick Svitek

Published: Monday, February 28, 2011

Updated: Sunday, May 1, 2011

Update 2: University spokesman Al Cubbage has released the following statement regarding the incident:

"Northwestern University faculty members engage in teaching and research on a wide variety of topics, some of them controversial and at the leading edge of their respective disciplines. The university supports the efforts of its faculty to further the advancement of knowledge."

Update: Prof. John Michael Bailey has released a statement regarding the demonstration. Read it here.

Northwestern students and administrators are defending an explicit after-class demonstration involving a woman being publicly penetrated by a sex toy on stage in the popular Human Sexuality course last week.

The optional presentation last Monday, attended by about 120 students, featured a naked non-student woman being repeatedly sexually stimulated to the point of orgasm by the sex toy, referred to as a "fucksaw." The device is essentially a motorized phallus.

The 600-person course, taught by psychology Prof. John Michael Bailey, is one of the largest at NU. The after-class events, which range from a question-and-answer session with swingers to a panel of convicted sex offenders, are a popular feature of the class. But they're optional and none of the material is included on exams.

Last Wednesday, Bailey devoted six minutes of his lecture to addressing mounting controversy regarding the incident and articulating his educational intent. He told the class he feared the demonstration would impact the after-class events, which are sponsored by the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and he explained the educational purpose of the events.

"I think that these after-class events are quite valuable. Why? One reason is that I think it helps us understand sexual diversity," he said, according to an audio file obtained by The Daily.

"Sticks and stones may break your bones, but watching naked people on stage doing pleasurable things will never hurt you," he said to loud applause at the end of his speech.

Bailey declined to comment for this article due to class preparations that he said last until Friday.

Chicago sex tour guide Ken Melvoin-Berg, who operated the device, emphasized the instructional value of the hour-long session, which also included a question-and-answer period.

"Talking about it doesn't always lend itself to this sort of thing," Melvoin-Berg said. "We're not just talking about it. We're actually doing it."

The shock value could be attributed to offended parties "not really knowing why they're upset, but knowing they're upset," he added.

NU administrators on Tuesday afternoon offered approving but cautious responses to the demonstration, with Dean of Students Burgwell Howard admitting he was "somewhat surprised" upon first hearing of the after-class presentation. The event, however, most likely "falls within the broad range of academic freedoms — whether one approves or disapproves," he wrote in an e-mail.

Laura Anne Stuart, the sexual health education and violence prevention coordinator at University Health Services, said after hearing of the event she consulted with a few members of SHAPE, the on-campus sexual health group she advises.

"As a sexuality educator, I do think that demonstrations of specific arousal techniques — those definitely have educational value," she said.

Stuart added that the sexual display's appropriateness depends on the class context, audience makeup and the professor's ultimate goals.

Bailey is no stranger to controversy. The 21-year professor, who repeatedly has been named to the Associated Student Government Faculty Honor Roll, including in 2010 and 2009, has drawn criticism for the research and conclusions of his book "The Man Who Would Be Queen," which explores male femininity and autogynephilia, a sexual fixation in which a man is sexually excited by the thought or image of himself as a female.

Interested attendees were warned five to 10 times about the intense nature of the demonstration, said McCormick senior Nick Wilson, who was present for the after-class event. He estimated at least 20 students began "trickling out" due to the warning.

McCormick junior Ellen Kourakos described the sex-toy implementation as "a little more explicit than expected."

Administrators and students interviewed said because the event was optional, it is a permissable addition to the class.

"Personally, I probably wouldn't want to witness that, but a student can take or not take the course," said Christine Woo, a member of NU's Christians on Campus chapter. "It's their choice."

Howard wrote in an e-mail Tuesday evening that hopefully students aimed to "plan their attendance accordingly," especially given the popular but provocative nature of Bailey's course.

Wilson downplayed the controversy, adding students were present because they chose to be and some were actually trying to move closer to the front of the room during the demonstration.

"Everybody's blowing it out of proportion," Wilson said. "It's one small thing. It's an intense thing, but it's a small thing."

patricksvitek2014@u.northwestern.edu

Comments

58 comments
anonymousfemale
Thu Apr 14 2011 11:22
Sounds to me like the 'professor' & the other guy have some real perversion issues. As for controversial - It
sounds like just another example of the exploitation of women. I wonder when & if these guys are going to have an 'optonal' activity demonstrating 'male arousal'. But how many students would actually want to watch a naked male masturbating to ejaculation? Yep - my guess is the overwhelming majority in this event were men who wanted to see the woman getting off. Doesn't sound very 'educational' to me.
zooks
Mon Apr 4 2011 01:30
so... where is the educational factor in doing this??
Anonymous
Fri Mar 11 2011 13:40
Oh my.
"...deserves a hanging."
I think I've seen all this in a movie somewhere before.
Student
Mon Mar 7 2011 19:37
One thing that seems to get lost in the shuffle is that not one student that attended the lecture is quoted as having found this event "controversial" in the slightest. Well done, Patrick Svitek. You've managed to thrust Northwestern's name into the spotlight once more. Was it worth the back-patting you received in the newsroom?
Anonymous
Mon Mar 7 2011 11:15
The whole thing is ridiculous. i do NOT support the instructor or the two that demonstrated the act. first of all, its a college human sexuality class..im sure everything that everyone saw has themselves personally experienced behind closed doors, therefore the only reason anyone performed such was for their 15 minutes of fame, and that they get off doing sexacts in public. There was no or is no other reason for the "demonstration" Faith and Jim kudos that you're open with your sexuality but this entire scenario is bull, and i do not support you or the instructor. Find another way to become famous.
Anonymous
Sun Mar 6 2011 12:25
I wonder what this tells us---when there's a public outcry about this demonstration---but there's not a public outcry about dissecting cadavers in med school?
Anonymous
Sun Mar 6 2011 07:31
This "apology" is ridiculous, and it just speaks volumes about the narcissism of Mr. Bailey. He gives those with opposing views an "F"? He believes that this should not be an issue because we have wars, financial crises and so-called "global warming"? Mr. Bailey, the country is big enough to report on these issues, as well as your seriously misguided and perverted demonstration. It seems the only thing you are apologizing for is getting media attention.
Give me a break. I would ask you: since defecation is a human function, often misunderstood, involving various physiological and psychological aspects, because some people do it three times a day, some once, some twice a week, and some can't do it at all, because some enjoy it, and some experience angst involving it, then would you agree that a live demonstration of a human being defecating would be educational and enlightening? Would you agree that anyone opposed to this is just anal-negative? Uptight? Unable to see the beauty of the function? Unable to understand that the Physiology professor is exercising freedom of expression in a higher education setting to adults old enough to vote, go to war, etc.?
No, I didn't think so.
Mr. Bailey, you had a live demonstration of a female being penetrated with a power tool. Period. You will always be remembered for this. There was nothing educational about it. It was lewd, voyeuristic, crude, and not "educational" by any stretch of the imagination.
Trust me, the female orgasm is not that complicated.
Anonymous
Sun Mar 6 2011 00:31
I want to take his class :) , for sure next school year will be packed with students, maybe 80% will be male students :)
Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 23:04
I want to know what this girl looked like. Weather she was very attractive or not by the average college student would be a big factor on weather i would attend the optional class or not. Lets face it. if your a good lover you can see that anyway ,but some students are not mature enough to experience that first hand. If she was very attractive that could be a life changing experience for a college student.. life with physical intimacy has a lot to offer.
Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 20:41
If your warned that quote unqoute that that this exercise was optional Isee no reason why anyone would have a problem people trying to learn something. I'm espeacialy thinking all women would hope that the men there were paying attenton
Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 20:15
Geeze. There was a time, a saner time, not really so long ago, when there would be absolutely no "controversy" surrounding this incident.
Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 19:08
The Human Sexuality class studied female sexual arousal. Seems relevant.
Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 17:03
the myopia...
it hurts...

Seriously though, I would think Qaddafi or Walker or Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa are figures worth watching than Bailey and a minor extracurricular activity that happened two weeks ago that only affected about 1.5% of the undergraduate population at a university most of you don't seem to attend.

No wait. Our moral sanctity is in jeopardy. We are a pure people. Clearly Northwestern is a bastion of bacchanalian perversion. Where are the pitchforks?

Anonymous
Sat Mar 5 2011 04:14
I'm reading these comments and I just can't believe how ignorant and self righteous people are, especially when they weren't even there. First of all, it's not a sex-ed class. It's a college course about human sexuality. Whether you like it or not, there are quite a few people out there who actually use things like the "fucksaw". Whether you like it or not, it certainly is interesting that human beings choose to do that sort of thing. If you're studying human nature, why ignore something like that? It is the perfect material for a college course. Also, it wasn't in public, idiots! If you can't see that, you should probably either shut up or go back to college, because you sound like a ignorant A-hole.
pumpy beanis
Sat Mar 5 2011 02:38
Prudes.
jamie
Fri Mar 4 2011 21:54
it was optional. those who knew they would be offended should have left . again optional. get over it. all those "kids" are old enough to see and do worse..porn, strip clubs, legaly have sex. again get over it
they are all adults and all have freedom of choice. one last time get over it
Anonymous
Fri Mar 4 2011 13:14
May 2008 Officer suspended 3 days without pay
Entered student residence without warrant or invite
due to smell of cannabis
Anonymous
Fri Mar 4 2011 10:56
This is an embarrassment to NU, the professor should be fired.We do hope the APA investigates this disturbing incident. On our news in CA , Bailey states it was" for entertainment and education". Ha! that's what $50,000 buys for education of our children these days? Take us off your donor list, NU. We won't be contributing anymore, and we hope others join us
Anonymous
Fri Mar 4 2011 03:47
pics or it didn't happen
Anonymous
Thu Mar 3 2011 17:59
There are literally no quotes in this article that justify describing the event as "controversial" from an objective standpoint.
View full site