Exeter University - where JK Rowling and Zara Tindall studied - tops the list of 108 universities where sex assault allegations have been made by people on the Everyone s Invited website.
The forum, set up last year by former student Soma Sara for people to share their stories of sexual abuse and rape culture , has shaken Britain s educational establishments.
Along with top schools, the UK s most prestigious universities were named in the 1,000 plus testimonials and red-brick Exeter appeared most, coming up in 65 anonymous testimonials on the website.
Oxford, Leeds, Edinburgh and University College London make up the top five.
Everyone s Invited s founder Miss Sara, who set it up while living with her grandmother s Paris home during lockdown after graduating from UCL, has said they were overwhelmed with new testimonials from universities.
A pupil has been expelled from the £44,000-a-year Abingdon School after sending an image of Nazis to his Jewish classmate, making rape threats on TikTok and posting a video mocking the Black Lives Matter movement.
Documents and emails from the independent Oxfordshire school detail the extent of several highly-offensive jokes the boy, 15, made via Snapchat and TikTok.
It is understood the pupil, who is studying for his GCSE exams at the all-boys school, has admitted to sending the controversial messages and apologised.
Despite this, Abingdon School confirmed to MailOnline that he has been excluded.
The teenager, who has not been named, sent a photograph of three people dressed as Nazi soldiers with the caption Happy Birthday to a Jewish student on Snapchat.
Colchester Royal Grammar School in Essex is one of the top schools in the UK
Scarlett Mansfield, 26, claims there was widespread misogyny and abuse
She alleged male pupil locked himself in two girls cars, refusing to get out until he received a sex act from them
Miss Mansfield was one of 30 girls to be admitted to sixth form in 2011
10,000 reports of alleged sexual assault have been posted online by students about schools all over the UK
Male teachers and boys must be taught about sexism to support women and girls facing overwhelming levels of sexual harassment and abuse, a union conference was told today.
The National Education Union s (NEU) annual conference heard that a toxic laddish culture pervades the country s secondary schools and sexism stalks the corridors and classrooms .
A motion passed at the conference said schools should have robust sexual harassment and abuse policies in place so teachers and students feel safe.
It noted the thousands of testimonials posted anonymously by students on the Everyone s Invited website, documenting sexual harassment and assault in schools and colleges.
Ofsted chief says sex assault claims could be coming from things happening outside of school dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.