ABC Religion & Ethics Emma Wood Updated Tue 16 Mar 2021, 5:22pm Better “consent training” for students, without the inculcation of the deeper principles that undergird the moral significance of sex, presents further dangers for young women. (Adrienne Bresnahan / iStock / Getty Images) Share Image: Responding adequately to the sad news of the Kambala sexual assault petition — the latest spotlight on the sexual assault epidemic — is a sobering challenge for us all. Leading educators in our secondary schools, depressed by the recent revelations and struggling to find solutions, are themselves revisiting calls for better “consent training” for students. But, as others have argued, “consent training” is bound to be an inadequate response on its own.