Participatory Audit Guide
The full youth-led method to audit gender equality in your institution — principles, phases and how to act on the findings.
A step-by-step guide to promoting gender equality and diversity on campus — with ready-to-use tools for students, teaching staff, administration and leadership.
It turns the Labs 4 Change method into a practical, modular path. Follow the five steps in order, or adapt them to your context.
Each step explains why it matters, what to do and who to involve. Run it as a small coordinating team or with a broader group — and adapt the tools to your campus rather than applying them as a rigid model.
Understand where your institution stands before acting.
Build a shared baseline from the data and gender diagnoses you already have.
What you’ll do
Who’s involved
Equality units · Leadership · Coordinating team
Tip from the field: You rarely start from zero — most institutions already hold useful data. The work is connecting it.
Build a feminist-informed network to guide the whole process.
Bring together people with gender, diversity and participatory expertise — inside and outside the university — to advise, facilitate and keep the process critical and intersectional.
What you’ll do
Who’s involved
Gender & diversity experts · Feminist researchers & practitioners · Equality staff · A coordinating organisation
Tip from the field: A small, committed network beats a large, formal one. Start building it early.
Give participants a shared foundation to see and analyse campus life through a gender lens.
An online academy and webinars so students and staff gain the concepts, ethics and observation skills to take part meaningfully — not just symbolically.
What you’ll do
Who’s involved
Gender & diversity experts as trainers · Project coordinators · Students & staff · Communication & technical support
Tip from the field: Keep it interactive and example-based, and make materials reusable throughout the project.
Make everyday, often invisible inequalities visible — together.
A participatory audit, led by a trained student core group, that observes spaces, teaching, communication and social dynamics, then turns observations into a shared diagnosis and clear priorities.
What you’ll do
Who’s involved
A trained student core group · Gender & diversity experts (facilitation) · An institutional coordinator
Tip from the field: Focus on systems and practices, never on monitoring individuals. Treat the results as collective knowledge, not complaints.
Turn the audit’s priorities into concrete, co-created solutions.
Safe, structured spaces where students, experts and staff move from diagnosis to action — designing and prototyping real proposals.
What you’ll do
Who’s involved
Students from the audit · Gender & diversity experts (facilitation) · Academic & administrative staff · Decision-makers, where relevant
Tip from the field: Value small, feasible changes alongside ambitious ones. Labs are seeds for ongoing change, not one-off events.
Ready-to-use templates and guides from the audit (Step 4). Download, use and adapt them.
The full youth-led method to audit gender equality in your institution — principles, phases and how to act on the findings.
A gamified exploration of five zones — spaces, participation, materials, roles and language — to surface hidden traces of inequality on campus.
A structured sheet to assess policies, plans and official documents against the equality indicators, recording evidence and an initial rating.
A field template to observe spaces — signage, campaigns, care spaces, inclusive language and imagery — and capture what they reveal.
A ready survey on students’ profile, perceived climate and treatment, knowledge of protocols and suggestions — with an intersectional lens.
A guide to interview Equality Unit staff about policies, protocols, training, challenges and what would strengthen gender equality.
A facilitation guide to explore how students perceive anti-harassment measures, their effectiveness and how to improve them.