Op-Ed: “No Bathroom Breaks” Policy is Discriminatory
April 9, 2018
Over the past semester, I have heard from several friends that professors in different departments across campus don’t allow students to excuse themselves to use the restroom during class. Some announce this policy during the first week of class, while others confront students who use the restroom about their bathroom use after class, or generally create an environment in which students feel pressured not to use the restroom and shamed when they do. As far as I am aware, this policy is not written into syllabuses, but enforced informally.
Explicit or not, I find any policy restricting students from leaving the classroom to use the restroom to be inappropriate, inconsiderate and discriminatory. There are a lot of reasons to be frustrated with this policy, but I take issue with three main aspects.
First and foremost, no professor should ever deny students the agency to care for their own bodies. In a country that has a long history of controlling the bodies of marginalized groups, we must be more thoughtful about the ways that policies like this one perpetuate domination of and discrimination against certain groups. We must affirm that everyone has a right to bodily autonomy, and that decisions about care for our own bodies should not be governed by someone else.
Second, professors should respect the privacy of their students, and recognize that there are a variety of chronic and acute medical conditions with which a student may attend class, but need to use the restroom with more frequency. Many of these are experienced at a higher rate or exclusively by female-bodied people, such as pre-menstrual syndrome, urinary tract infections, mensuration, pregnancy, menopause and endometriosis, suggesting that this policy tends to target female-bodied students. Regardless of sex, students should never be forced to disclose private medical information to their professors in order to be able to use the restroom freely and without shame.
Finally, the assertion that leaving the classroom to use the restroom is distracting and disrupting to the class is illogical, or at least centered on professors’ needs rather than the needs of the students. It is much more distracting to be physically uncomfortable during class than for students to quietly leave and enter the classroom occasionally.
I believe this policy is discriminatory, but it is at the very least inconsiderate, and ultimately contrary to the college’s expressed mission. College students are adults and should be treated as such.
Josh • Nov 5, 2021 at 4:42 pm
“…. the assertion that leaving the classroom to use the restroom is distracting and disrupting to the class is illogical, or at least centered on professors’ needs rather than the needs of the students.”
The professor’s needs in running a class are extremely important, however. If the professor is teaching an 80-minute class in a small classroom where students enter and exit for pretty much the entire class, I think you can see how this would be distracting. Further, different professors have differing thresholds of tolerance for distraction.
“It is much more distracting to be physically uncomfortable during class than for students to quietly leave and enter the classroom occasionally.”
Where students leave and enter quietly, but also continuously, and in a small room, there is no way to be unnoticed. It is extremely annoying.
I understand that students have physical needs, but I never see a professor leave the classroom during class to use the restroom. Maybe the answer is to take a scheduled mid-class break designated for taking care of such needs and hope that students will be able to wait for the break.
A whitman student • Apr 12, 2018 at 4:56 pm
this is not an issue
Another Whitman student • Apr 13, 2018 at 3:33 pm
Would you care to elaborate?
Aliya Robin • Apr 10, 2018 at 5:23 pm
Thank you for writing this. Not something I usually think about but it is an important discussion to have. I’ve heard that its illegal in certain states (California is the only one I know about) for teachers to restrict students access to the bathroom. I don’t know if that applies in Washington or to colleges or to private institutions but might be something to look into.