198 results
Search Results
52. Australian teacher attitudes, beliefs and comfort towards sexuality and gender diverse students.
- Author
-
Burns, Sharyn, Saltis, Hanna, Hendriks, Jacqueline, Abdolmanafi, Atefe, Davis-McCabe, Catriona, Tilley, P. J. Matt, and Winter, Sam
- Subjects
HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIAL media ,CROSS-sectional method ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,GENDER-nonconforming people ,CURRICULUM ,SURVEYS ,T-test (Statistics) ,STUDENTS ,SCHOOLS ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
This study explored school Australian teachers' beliefs towards, and comfort around, socialising with same-sex attracted and trans and gender diverse people, as well as beliefs aboutinclusive school-based policy and other school strategies to enhance the wellbeing of same sex attracted and trans and gender diverse students. Teachers (n = 109) in Australia demonstrated positive attitudes and beliefs towards, and comfort engaging with same sex attracted and trans and gender diverse people, although participants were significantly more positive in their reactions towards same sex attracted people. While participants were generally supportive of inclusive school strategies and policies, over half reported that policies that were inclusive of sexual and gender minorities were not implemented in their school. Less than one third of participants indicated inclusive education was included in the curriculum at their school. Ongoing professional development was identified as essential by almost all participants. Findings support the need for Australian government policy mandating inclusive education be included in the curriculum and whole school strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. Towards a side-spreading of the subject of abortion in schools.
- Author
-
Pindyck, Maya
- Subjects
ABORTION ,CURRICULUM ,EXPERIENCE ,SEX education ,NARRATIVES ,POETRY (Literary form) - Abstract
Liberal common sense sees the absence of conversations about abortion in schools as the consequence of a taboo that leaves teenage girls uninformed and silenced. From this perspective, the solution is to systematically introduce the subject of abortion in sex education curricula in order to provide information, resources and discussion on the schools' terms. Using post-structuralist theory, I argue that what might be needed instead is a certain ‘side-spreading’, rather than an official understanding, of the subject of abortion in schools. I aim to de-naturalise dominant liberal discourse by making transparent the links between sex education and ‘populational reasoning’, considering powers of production, questioning the position of schools as official holders and spreaders of approved knowledge about sex, and inviting possibilities to ‘de-territorialise’ and ‘re-territorialise’ the subject of abortion in unpredictable ways. This paper is composed of personal reflections, poems and theoretical explorations that challenge the predetermined nature of sex education curricula. Arguments for loosening the subject of abortion through multiple discourses and modes of expression are mirrored by the fragmented, genre-crossing form this paper takes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. Multiple dimensions of safe space for LGBTQ students: school staff perceptions.
- Author
-
Beasy, Kim, Grant, Ruby, and Emery, Sherridan
- Subjects
SAFETY ,SCHOOL environment ,RESEARCH methodology ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,EXECUTIVES ,CURRICULUM ,INTERVIEWING ,LGBTQ+ people ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,MINORITY students ,SPACE perception ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
Inclusive school environments have been shown to improve educational outcomes, retention, mental health and overall wellbeing for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning (LGBTQ) students. Anti-bullying approaches have been common strategies used in schools to promote safety for all students, yet a well-established critique among scholars and educators suggests such approaches by themselves are insufficient. Little research exists investigating the spatial aspects of forming LGBTQ-inclusive school cultures. This article reports on an Australian study exploring teachers' and school staff understandings of how space influences inclusion and how they negotiateed or established 'safe spaces' for LGBTQ students. Drawing on the work of Edward Soja, we explored how participants constituted safety in conceived and perceived spaces, and how this informed the ways in which physical environments were established in the lived space to promote inclusion. We reveal the role of physical, discursive and curriculum spaces in everyday schooling activities and practices to promote LGBTQ inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Cherish Lives? Progress and compromise in sexuality education textbooks produced in contemporary China.
- Author
-
Ji, Yaya and Reiss, Michael J.
- Subjects
FEMINISM ,TEXTBOOKS ,CURRICULUM ,SEX education ,DISCOURSE analysis ,SEXUAL orientation identity ,LGBTQ+ people ,ELEMENTARY schools - Abstract
This article examines a set of sexuality education textbooks used in a selection of primary schools in Beijing. These textbooks, under the overall name of 珍爱生命 (Cherish Lives), embody a comprehensive sexuality education approach with content designed on the basis of the UNESCO International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education. Using feminist critical discourse analysis, we explore these books from three angles: the challenge of engaging with children as sexual subjects, given adult hegemony around sex; confusion about efforts to break the presentation of gender as a binary; and the contradiction between reproducing the myth of universal heterosexuality and attempting to present an education sensitive to LGBT issues. We show that while these textbooks demonstrate progress in sexuality education, they also manifest compromise. Despite this compromise, the books have recently been withdrawn and it is unclear whether their publication heralds a new, high quality approach to primary school sexuality education or not. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. Counselling students' experience of an online sexuality course.
- Author
-
Brammer, M. Kathryn and Goodrich, Kristopher M.
- Subjects
ONLINE education ,COUNSELING ,HUMAN sexuality ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,CURRICULUM ,EXPERIENCE ,SEX education ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,DIARY (Literary form) ,STUDENTS ,THEMATIC analysis ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This study explored the experiences of counselling students engaged in an online sexuality course to better understand how to prepare multiculturally competent future clinicians. A phenomenological approach was adopted which reports on findings from 5 student participants enrolled in an online class. Data for the study were collected through course dairy entries in course modules and follow-up face-to-face semi-structured interviews with all participants. Four themes were identified to reflect how the researchers interpreted student's experiences of the course. These were: the importance of early life experiences; the significance of pre-course later life influences; experiences of the course; and timing. Each of these themes carried implications for the future provision of the sexuality education and training provided as part of counsellor education programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. The pedagogy of pedagogues for sexual education in Riobamba, Ecuador: a pilot approach to training sexual education facilitators in a Latin American and Spanish language setting.
- Author
-
Kotkowski, Eithan, Realini, Janet, Cisneros, Valeria, Rosenfeld, Jason, Berggren, Ruth, Gafas Gonzalez, Carlos, and Kneese, Garrett
- Subjects
TEACHING methods ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,CONFIDENCE ,SELF-evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,CURRICULUM ,SEX education ,SPANISH language ,COMMUNICATION ,DECISION making ,SEXUAL minorities ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Educational efforts to reduce global rates of adolescent pregnancy vary widely with a significant deficiency in the domain of sex education facilitator training. In this study, we sought to establish a pilot approach to comprehensive sex education facilitator training in Riobamba, Ecuador. The approach was aligned with UNESCO recommendations for training facilitators using an adapted version of the U.S.-based Big Decisions curriculum. Four internationally recruited bilingual instructors led a six-day (27-hour) intensive training-of-facilitators programme with twenty trainees using the Big Decisions sex education curriculum. Quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted using various approaches: anonymised and pre/post-self-assessments, daily feedback surveys of self and instructors, and facilitation practice evaluations. Responses to anonymised surveys indicated improved self-perceived confidence in teaching each curriculum section. More objective pre- and post-teach-back evaluations showed improved ability to teach randomly assigned lessons as assessed by trainers. The pedagogy of facilitator training in comprehensive sex education seeks to combine evidence-informed and culturally appropriate approaches to training facilitators under unique local conditions using adapted assessment tools. This project identified important culturally relevant insights relevant to the future training of comprehensive sex education facilitators working within culturally conservative communities, and Latin America in particular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
58. School district choice of sexuality education curriculum in Mississippi.
- Author
-
Sullivan Robinson, Rachel, Kunnuji, Michael, Shawar, Yusra Ribhi, and Shiffman, Jeremy
- Subjects
GONORRHEA ,NONPROFIT organizations ,PRACTICAL politics ,CURRICULUM ,SEX education ,SCHOOLS ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,POVERTY - Abstract
In 2011, the US state of Mississippi mandated its school districts to adopt a sexuality education curriculum. Approximately half of districts chose a more comprehensive abstinence-plus curriculum over an abstinence-only curriculum. To understand this outcome, we conducted a logistic regression analysis of school district curriculum choice among Mississippi's school districts using data from 2012 when districts made the initial curricular decision, and from 2019, to assess continuity of findings. At both time points, poorer districts were more likely to adopt abstinence-plus curricula, despite the associated costs. Urban districts were also significantly more likely to choose abstinence-plus curricula, as were districts connected to Mississippi First, a local non-profit organisation that linked school districts to federal funding for abstinence-plus curricula. Despite the connection between political and sexual liberalism, political liberalism had limited predictive power over district sexuality education curriculum choice. Furthermore, one-third of the districts that adopted abstinence-only curricula were very similar to those that adopted abstinence-plus curricula in terms of poverty, religious adherents, rural location, political liberalism, gonorrhoea burden and racial composition. These findings indicate the importance of state mandates for sexuality education, federal funding for evidence-based curricula, and the presence of supportive local organisations to advance the adoption of more comprehensive sexuality education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. Informing sexuality education through youth-generated anonymous questions.
- Author
-
Stevens, Sally, Thompson, ElisabethMorgan, Vinson, Jenna, Greene, Alison, Powell, Claudia, Licona, Adela C., and Russell, Stephen
- Subjects
CONCEPTUAL structures ,CURRICULUM ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX education ,PATIENT participation ,ATTITUDES toward sex ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper examines a comprehensive sexuality education programme, Health Education for Youth (HEY), which incorporates anonymous questions about sex and sexuality that participating youth generate into the curriculum. HEY utilises a social ecology framework, decolonising perspectives and feminist methods to inform the programme, its facilitation and the incorporation of participant questions into the curriculum. This paper describes the theoretical and methodological frameworks; curriculum content and use of anonymous questions; programme and participant characteristics; and types and content of questions asked by youth. Findings indicate that young people utilise their agency to ask important sexuality questions and are concerned about similar types and content of questions regardless of programme setting. The benefits of using a social ecology framework, decolonising perspectives and feminist methods to guide curriculum content and session facilitation are discussed along with the value of incorporating anonymous questions about sex to create sexuality education that is youth driven and youth relevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. How should school-based sex education be provided for adolescents in Saudi Arabia? Views of stakeholders.
- Author
-
Horanieh, Nour, Macdowall, Wendy, and Wellings, Kaye
- Subjects
ISLAM ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL personnel ,CURRICULUM ,INTERVIEWING ,SEX education for teenagers ,TEACHERS ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,RELIGION - Abstract
Although sex education has been found to improve young people's sexual and reproductive health, no formal programmes exist in Saudi Arabia. This study aims to assess the views of stakeholders on the need for sex education programmes for adolescents in Saudi Arabia, suggested forms of provision, and views on the information provided in Science and Religion curricula. Twenty-eight semi-structured interviews were conducted with policy-makers, healthcare providers, teachers and religious scholars. Thematic analysis was undertaken. Unanimity was expressed on the need for school-based sex education programmes. When asked who should deliver them, stakeholders differentiated between who should be in charge of designing the programmes and who should deliver them. Tension was evident on the role of religious scholars within these two phases of implementation. The inclusion of information that might seem to 'encourage sinful' premarital sexual experience was contentious. Although scientific and religious messaging strategies were viewed as non-contradictory, opinions differed as to which messaging strategy to focus on. Information in the 2013 curricula was criticised by some as inaccurate, promoting an 'othering' of Westerner and inciting fear. However, more recent curricula have omitted several of these criticised passages and may provide an opportunity to expand the focus on sexual health-related topics within the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. Peering into ‘spaces for change’: empowerment, subversion and resistance in a gendered violence prevention education programme in Kenya
- Author
-
Mary Cobbett-Ondiek
- Subjects
030505 public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human sexuality ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Informal education ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Intervention (law) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Peering ,Pedagogy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,Subversion ,0305 other medical science ,Empowerment ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Changing and challenging social norms is essential to preventing gendered violence, and education is widely regarded as a key means through which this can happen. Whilst good-quality research exploring the outcomes of such educational interventions exists, very little is known about what actually happens inside educational spaces aiming to instigate change. This gap limits understandings of how and why change does (or does not) happen. This paper aims to address this by providing an opportunity to peer into a ‘space for change’. To do this, observational data are analysed from a non-formal education programme aiming to empower girls to be free from violence in Kenya. Three moments are explored which illustrate ‘empowerment’, ‘subversion’ and ‘resistance’. The paper also explores the often hidden stories of the facilitators, showing that who teaches can be as important as the curriculum used in determining what happens inside educational spaces for change.
- Published
- 2016
62. Risky forms of knowledge: configuring pedagogical practices and their excesses in a sexuality education programme in South Africa
- Author
-
Andrée Gacoin
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,030505 public health ,05 social sciences ,Population ,050301 education ,Context (language use) ,Object (philosophy) ,Feminism ,Education ,Power (social and political) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ethnography ,Pedagogy ,0305 other medical science ,education ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,The Imaginary - Abstract
Within the context of sexuality education as an HIV prevention strategy, much attention has been given to what content should be taught and the effectiveness of that content in achieving desired goals. While some research has problematised how curricular content is understood or taken-up, what remains largely unquestioned is a pedagogical imaginary of knowledge as a fixed and stable object that can be transmitted from teacher to learner. This paper builds on feminist readings of pedagogy, and in particular the work of Elizabeth Ellsworth, to interrogate what might happen within sexuality education by thinking about knowledge as continually being made. Drawing on data from a year-long ethnographic research study conducted with loveLife, a national HIV prevention programme for young people in South Africa, the paper problematises the perceived boundaries of what is taught and explicitly engages the pedagogical approach as a constitutive part of what can/should/must be known as well as what kind of r...
- Published
- 2015
63. Classroom implementation of national sexuality education curricula in four low- and middle-income countries.
- Author
-
Keogh, Sarah C., Leong, Ellie, Motta, Angélica, Sidze, Estelle, Monzón, Ana Silvia, and Amo-Adjei, Joshua
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,TEACHER education ,HEALTH education ,HIGH schools ,MIDDLE-income countries ,NONPROFIT organizations ,CURRICULUM ,SCHOOL administrators ,INTERVIEWING ,SEX education ,HUMAN services programs ,SURVEYS ,LOW-income countries ,TEACHERS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,HIGH school students - Abstract
School-based comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) can help adolescents acquire crucial knowledge and skills to achieve their full potential, particularly in low- and middle-income countries with higher rates of negative sexual and reproductive outcomes. While many low- and middle-income countries have developed CSE curricula, little is known about how these are implemented in the classroom. This multi-country mixed-methods study analysed challenges to the implementation of national CSE curricula in schools in Ghana, Kenya, Peru and Guatemala, based on surveys of secondary school principals, teachers and students aged 15–17 years, and in-depth interviews with central and local government, NGOs and youth organisations. In all four countries, inadequate teacher training remained a major hurdle to effective implementation, manifesting in teacher discomfort and inaccurate messaging. This was compounded by a lack of comprehensive teaching resources. CSE classes were focused mainly on biology at the expense of contraception, gender and rights, despite students' desire for greater coverage of these topics. Teaching methods lacked interactive activities necessary to develop skills and values. Findings offer useful lessons to improve school-level implementation in these and other countries facing similar challenges. Increasing teacher training and distributing comprehensive CSE materials responsive to adolescents' needs remain priorities in all countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
64. ‘I love Barbies … I am a Boy’: gender happiness for social justice education
- Author
-
Karleen Pendleton Jiménez
- Subjects
Sexual identity ,030505 public health ,Affect theory ,Gender diversity ,4. Education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Gender studies ,Education ,Gender psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,5. Gender equality ,Consciousness raising ,Happiness ,Gender history ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
This paper draws on findings from a two-year study of gender and gender transgression among school children and youth in rural Ontario, Canada conducted while running gender equity workshops for students aged 8–18 years, in which I asked participants to document what gender looked and felt like. Through writing prompts, pictures, discussion and theatre, roughly 600 participants had the opportunity to describe gender as well as responses to perceived transgressions of gender. In the course of this work, I became especially interested in the emotions identified by participants as being part of, or experienced through, their gender. In this paper, I focus on notions of happiness, enjoyment and fun, as described by participants in their responses. Happiness is a part of gender that is often overlooked in human rights definitions of gender identity and expression, as well as in the translation of legal discourse into a social justice-oriented curriculum. While participants in this study expressed a wid...
- Published
- 2015
65. Gay and lesbian literature disrupting the heteronormative space of the high school English classroom
- Author
-
Kirsten Helmer
- Subjects
Language arts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Queer theory ,Literacy ,Education ,Queer pedagogy ,050903 gender studies ,Pedagogy ,Queer ,Homosexuality ,0509 other social sciences ,Lesbian ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
This paper offers insights into how the teaching of queer topics in English language arts classes can be reframed by bridging the goals, practices and conceptual tools of queer theory to literacy teaching. Drawing on an ethnographic classroom study, which explored a 13-week high school Gay and Lesbian Literature course, this paper discusses how teaching an English literature curriculum centred on the voices and stories of LGBTQI people constitutes a meaningful site for learning and teaching. In the process, I show how a queer-themed literature curriculum not only intervenes disruptively into the heteronormative space of school through its content but also through pedagogical practices that open up new lines of thinking for understanding diverse sexualities and genders. Through vignettes from the classroom, I illustrate how queer moments were enacted in this high school course as the class (a) deconstructed literary and media texts; (b) used moments of discomfort for learning; (c) produced counter-narrativ...
- Published
- 2015
66. 'No sex please!' We have been labelled intellectually disabled.
- Author
-
Ferrante, Charmaine Agius and Oak, Eileen
- Subjects
COMMUNICATIVE competence ,CURRICULUM ,HUMAN rights ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX education ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL skills ,TEACHING ,THEORY ,ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
This article aims to explore the sexual agency of young people over age 16 labelled as having an intellectual disability. We argue that 30 years of inclusive education have failed to address the question of sexuality education and agency for individuals with an intellectual disability. Contextualising the failure of contemporary sexuality education within schools, and drawing on concepts of subjectivity, the article deconstructs the presumed normalcy of able-bodied sexuality to highlight the inappropriateness of sex education for young people labelled with an intellectual disability. Using Crip theory, it illustrates how the intersectionality between 'abled-bodied-ness' and' 'heteronormativity' converges to lead to the invisibility of individuals with intellectual disability, therefore reinforcing social exclusion from sex and sexuality as a key aspect of citizenship, specifically, the right to a safe and pleasurable sex life. An argument is made for a critical, andragogical approach to sexuality education offering a new paradigm for developing sexuality education to facilitate the sexual agency of individuals with intellectual disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
67. Abstinence versus harm reduction approaches to sexual health education: views of key stakeholders in Saudi Arabia.
- Author
-
Horanieh, Nour, Macdowall, Wendy, and Wellings, Kaye
- Subjects
PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,AVOIDANCE (Psychology) ,COMMUNICATION ,CULTURE ,CURRICULUM ,EXECUTIVES ,GROUNDED theory ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH status indicators ,SEXUAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,PERSONAL space ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC opinion ,RELIGION ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK-taking behavior ,SEX education for teenagers ,SEXUAL abstinence ,SOCIAL skills ,TEACHERS ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,ADOLESCENT health ,VALUES (Ethics) ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEORY ,JUDGMENT sampling ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HARM reduction ,THEMATIC analysis ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
This study elicited views of key stakeholders on the need for adolescent sex education and the appropriate model to adopt in Saudi Arabia. Semi-structured interviews were conducted in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, with 28 stakeholders: policy-makers; social and healthcare providers; teachers and school staff; and religious scholars. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Thematic analysis was conducted to identify emerging themes. Stakeholders saw the need to provide sex education. Opinions fell across a spectrum of model preference: abstinence-only or harm reduction. The conceptualisation of harm incorporated social risks. Silences and avoidance marked the boundaries between what was permitted and what was prohibited. In determining the form of any sex education curriculum in Saudi Arabia, caution is needed in assuming the ready transferability of Western-based models of sex education since in Saudi Arabia harm is conceptualised as damaging personal reputation, social structure and physical health. Religious doctrine and scientific evidence are perceived as non-conflicting sources for formulating a culturally sensitive programme. Local idiom characterised by indirectness and ambiguity offers challenges and possibilities for conveying sensitive messages. Findings from this study can be useful for communities with similar religious beliefs or social traditions intending to formulate an acceptable sex education programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. How can we make LGBTQ+-inclusive sex education programmes truly inclusive? A case study of Chicago Public Schools' policy and curriculum.
- Author
-
Jarpe-Ratner, Elizabeth
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,FOCUS groups ,SEXUAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOLS ,SEX education ,JUDGMENT sampling ,LGBTQ+ people ,HUMAN services programs ,STAKEHOLDER analysis - Abstract
In the USA, there has been a nationwide call for comprehensive sexual health education programs to be LGBTQ+-inclusive. The Chicago Public Schools (CPS) K-12 curriculum was intentionally designed to align with the National Sexuality Education Standards and to be inclusive of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning as well as other (LGBTQ+) identities (Chicago Public Schools, 2013). This case study of CPS's policy and curriculum implementation, with a focus on 9th grade, examines the extent to which this curriculum is truly experienced as inclusive by students and teachers. Twenty-nine ninth grade sex education class-periods were observed in 4 schools, 12 teachers were interviewed and 5 student focus groups were conducted to assess perceptions of the nature of inclusivity of the curriculum and ongoing needs to ensure inclusivity going forward. Students wanted a more LGBTQ+-inclusive curriculum defined by 1) including identity topics integrated throughout the curriculum; 2) more holistic discussion of sexuality; 3) more information about identity development, and 4) the creation of a safe space through an accepting, non-judgmental tone from teachers. Implications for the sexual health education field as well as for the larger public health field are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
69. LGBTQ+ students of colour and their experiences and needs in sexual health education: 'You belong here just as everybody else'.
- Author
-
Roberts, Calpurnyia, Shiman, Lauren J., Dowling, Erin A., Tantay, L, Masdea, Jennifer, Pierre, Jennifer, Lomax, Deborah, and Bedell, Jane
- Subjects
EDUCATION of minorities ,EDUCATION of LGBTQ+ people ,BULLYING ,CULTURE ,CURRICULUM ,EXPERIENCE ,GENDER identity ,SEXUAL health ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,INTERNET ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MENTAL health ,MINORITY students ,RACE ,RELIGION ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SCHOOL environment ,HUMAN sexuality ,SOCIAL stigma ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,TEACHING methods ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
There is growing consensus that sexual health education should be inclusive of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning students, and students of various identities on the spectrums of sexuality and gender (LGBTQ+). However, to date, the perspectives of LGTBQ+ teenagers of colour remain under-investigated. Twenty-five in-depth interviews were conducted in 2017–2018 in New York City with LGBTQ+ high school students of colour. Thematic analysis was used to conceptualise the barriers LGBTQ+ students of colour face in learning about sexual health education in school. Students were Latino/a/x (n = 15), non-Latino Black (n = 8), or Asian (n = 2) and self-identified in varied ways in terms of sexuality and gender. Students reported receiving inadequate sexual health education in school due to feeling: 1) unrepresented, 2) unsupported, 3) stigmatised, and 4) bullied. Students filled needed gaps by seeking information and support from external sources. Many students proposed institutional changes or shifts in the school environment to address identified issues, including modifying curricula to incorporate information about consent, mental health and pronouns from the viewpoints of LGBTQ+ teenagers, and to highlight the role of culture, religion and race/ethnicity to represent different experiences. Incorporating the unique experiences of LGBTQ+ students of colour is needed to ensure that all students receive relevant sexual health education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
70. Institutional and contextual obstacles to sexuality education policy implementation in Uganda.
- Author
-
Ninsiima, Anna B., Coene, Gily, Michielsen, Kristien, Najjuka, Solome, Kemigisha, Elizabeth, Ruzaaza, Gad Ndaruhutse, Nyakato, Viola N., and Leye, Els
- Subjects
CULTURE ,CURRICULUM ,EXECUTIVES ,FOCUS groups ,HEALTH education ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC administration ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX education ,TEACHERS ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,THEMATIC analysis ,HUMAN services programs ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
The successful implementation of sexuality education policy for young people has been shown to depend on a sound legislative and institutional framework. This article shows that both institutional factors and contextual obstacles have impeded the implementation of sexuality education policy in Uganda. Qualitative research techniques were employed in the form of systematic document reviews and extensive field-work with 64 participants, of which 32 were in-depth interviews with policymakers and key stakeholders in Kampala and Mbarara districts. In addition, four focus group discussions (n = 32) were conducted with teachers. The analysis was carried out thematically and manually, using open and axial coding. It was found that policy success was primarily limited by two broad factors: firstly, by institutional weaknesses such as a lack of capacity, inadequate financial commitment, poor coordination between relevant ministries and ineffective monitoring, and regulatory frameworks; secondly, by social, cultural and religious norms that give informal power to religious and cultural leaders. Two strategies are suggested as potential ways forward: (i) a commitment to both the human and financial resources needed to monitor adolescent sexual, and reproductive health programmes, but more importantly (ii) the initiation of negotiations with cultural and religious leaders to yield more positive outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. Reasons students at a US University do or do not enrol in a human sexuality course.
- Author
-
King, Bruce M., Scott, Alexandra E., Van Doorn, Elizabeth M., Abele, Emily E., and McDevitt, Meredith E.
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,COLLEGE students ,CURRICULUM ,RESEARCH ,SEX education ,STUDENT attitudes ,T-test (Statistics) ,SCHOOL admission - Abstract
In this exploratory study, students at a US university were asked about their motivations for enrolling or not enrolling in a human sexuality course. Questionnaires were given to 617 undergraduate students enrolled in a human sexuality course and to 169 final-year students who had not taken the course. The top five reasons students gave for enrolling were: (1) it seemed more interesting than other courses; (2) friends recommended it; (3) it met an academic requirement; (4) easy 'A'; and (5) other courses were full. The first reason for enrolling specific to desiring knowledge of sexuality was ranked sixth. Although the sexuality course has never limited enrolment, only a small percentage of undergraduates choose to take the course. The top five reasons that graduating seniors had not enrolled were: (1) could not work it into their schedule; (2) not interested; (3) not aware of the course; (4) already knew enough about sexuality; and (5) it did not fill a requirement. When some incongruent responses were eliminated, the primary reason for not enrolling was 'not interested.' The results indicate that sex educators should not assume that most college students want classroom-taught sexuality education. Suggestions are provided that may help increase interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Creating ‘participatory spaces’: involving children in planning sex education lessons in Kenya, Ghana and Swaziland
- Author
-
Mary Cobbett, Susan Kiragu, and Colleen McLaughlin
- Subjects
business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Taboo ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,Citizen journalism ,Interpersonal communication ,medicine.disease ,Education ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Pedagogy ,medicine ,Active listening ,Action research ,business ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Sexuality education in African contexts is riddled with socio-cultural complexity, tension and taboo. Such tensions are compounded when the focus of intervention is primary school children who are presumed ‘innocent’. However, sub-Saharan Africa remains the region of the world most severely impacted upon by the human immunodeficiency virus and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, thus heightening the need to talk to children about sex and sexuality. This paper explores the role of consulting pupils, participation and dialogue as methodological innovations that have the potential to enable new ways of thinking about sex and sexuality and the transcendence of ‘dead end debates’ about what should and should not be taught. The paper is based on data from an action research project in Kenya, Ghana and Swaziland. The data show that the desire to create a space characterised by consultation, listening and dialogue in which adults and children could participate ‘as if’ they were social equals was inevitably no...
- Published
- 2013
73. Informing sexuality education through youth-generated anonymous questions
- Author
-
Alison R Greene, Adela C. Licona, Stephen T. Russell, Sally J. Stevens, Elisabeth Morgan Thompson, Jenna Vinson, and Claudia Powell
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Sexuality education ,Pedagogy ,Agency (sociology) ,Social ecology ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Human sexuality ,Health education ,Sociology ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Session (web analytics) ,Education - Abstract
This paper examines a comprehensive sexuality education programme, Health Education for Youth (HEY), which incorporates anonymous questions about sex and sexuality that participating youth generate into the curriculum. HEY utilises a social ecology framework, decolonising perspectives and feminist methods to inform the programme, its facilitation and the incorporation of participant questions into the curriculum. This paper describes the theoretical and methodological frameworks; curriculum content and use of anonymous questions; programme and participant characteristics; and types and content of questions asked by youth. Findings indicate that young people utilise their agency to ask important sexuality questions and are concerned about similar types and content of questions regardless of programme setting. The benefits of using a social ecology framework, decolonising perspectives and feminist methods to guide curriculum content and session facilitation are discussed along with the value of incorporatin...
- Published
- 2013
74. Advancing Sexuality Studies: a short course on sexuality theory and research methodologies
- Author
-
Duane Duncan, Julienne Corboz, Gillian Fletcher, Sean Slavin, and Gary W. Dowsett
- Subjects
Politics ,Sexual identity ,Curriculum development ,Public policy ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,Short course ,Sociology ,International development ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education - Abstract
Critical Sexuality Studies is an emerging field of academic enquiry linked to an international network of advocacy agencies, activists, and political issues. This paper reports on the development of an advanced short course in sexuality theory and research, drawing on Critical Sexuality Studies and aiming directly at academics in developing countries working in sexuality issues. Over a three-year period, a new curriculum was developed by an international team. The course was piloted in two continents, refined, revised, and released globally under a Creative Commons licence in 2010 on a dedicated website. This paper documents the project and its progress to date.
- Published
- 2013
75. Sexuality education in rural Lesotho schools: challenges and possibilities
- Author
-
Mathabo Khau
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Sexuality education ,business.industry ,education ,Population ,Developing country ,Human sexuality ,Social value orientations ,Education ,Pedagogy ,Medicine ,Narrative ,Rural area ,business ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present and discuss some of the obstacles to effective sexuality education in rural Lesotho schools and offer some suggestions that could facilitate positive change in the current status of sexuality education. The call for education as a ‘vaccine’ against new HIV infections places teachers at the forefront of the fight against the pandemic, and thus it is imperative to understand how they experience teaching about sexuality. Findings in the present study derive from data generated through a research project that sought to explore women teachers' experiences of teaching sexuality education in rural schools in Lesotho. Twelve women teachers' narratives are used to examine the obstacles to effective sexuality education in rural contexts. The study highlights the role of gender dynamics and culture in the effectiveness of school-based sexuality education. The paper argues for a more concerted effort and collaboration between curriculum developers and education stakeholders such th...
- Published
- 2012
76. Searching for sexual revolutions in India: non-governmental organisation-designed sex education programmes as a means towards gender equality and sexual empowerment in New Delhi, India
- Author
-
Mette Gabler
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,National curriculum ,Femininity ,Focus group ,Education ,Promiscuity ,Sociology ,Social science ,Empowerment ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Qualitative research ,media_common - Abstract
At the foundation of most inequalities in expression of sexuality lie social constructions of gender. In this paper, sex education is considered as a possibility to challenge sexism and promote healthy and self-affirmative sex lives. In the past decade, the discourse of sex education in India has become a ‘battle of morality’ where concerned citizens condemn sex education on the grounds it may encourage sexual activity and immoral conduct (e.g. promiscuity or infidelity). The work of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) is an alternative to the governmental national curriculum plan. This paper discusses NGO potential in terms of sexual empowerment by examining beliefs and understanding, choices of information, strategies and methods, and approaches apparent in sex education programmes and projects. Through qualitative data, findings were analysed by constructing a sexual empowerment model that divides components of sex education into four parts and utilises theories of empowerment. The main findings incl...
- Published
- 2011
77. Free association in sex education: understanding sexuality as the flow of thought in conversation and curriculum
- Author
-
Brian Casemore
- Subjects
business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human sexuality ,Abstinence ,Focus group ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Negotiation ,Conversation ,business ,Psychology ,Curriculum ,Social psychology ,Free association (psychology) ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common ,Reproductive health - Abstract
This paper draws on the theory and method of free association in psychoanalysis to frame an investigation of the content, structure, and function of the thinking expressed in conversations about sexuality and sexual health. The investigation emerges from an ongoing three-year study of the way adolescents, teachers, and peer sex educators negotiate and interpret the language of abstinence and the emotional terrain of sexuality in everyday speech and interaction. Through close readings of a film and related focus group data, the paper calls for attention to free associative movements of thought in sex education conversations. It argues that fostering free association in sex education will make room for the translation of sexuality into thought about the contours of sexuality in experience.
- Published
- 2010
78. The new sexuality education curriculum for Queensland primary schools
- Author
-
Juliette D. G. Goldman
- Subjects
business.industry ,education ,Primary education ,Redress ,Human sexuality ,Life skills ,Education ,Physical education ,Pedagogy ,Medicine ,Health education ,business ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Reproductive health - Abstract
A departmental review of education curricula in Queensland, Australia has found that minimal or no learning about sexuality education takes place. Its public schools and teachers are able to avoid or not fulfil their obligations regarding the teaching of sexuality education and reproductive health to children and young people. This lacuna in schools' duty of care may significantly compromise the well-being, choices, life skills and opportunities for young people as they mature towards adult citizenship, and may even lead to potentially hazardous situations for them. To redress this deficiency, a new curriculum and supporting documents have been developed by Queensland's curriculum authority. This paper audits both the current Human Relationships Education and the new Sexual and Reproductive Health Education curricula. This paper also analyses the rationale for teaching school students about sexuality, relationships and reproduction as an essential part of Health and Physical Education, in light of signifi...
- Published
- 2010
79. Pushed to the margins – sex and relationships in Greek primary textbooks
- Author
-
Margarita Gerouki
- Subjects
Government ,Language arts ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,4. Education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,National curriculum ,Science education ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Environmental education ,Pedagogy ,Curriculum development ,Mathematics education ,Health education ,Sociology ,0305 other medical science ,business ,0503 education ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
In 2001, the Greek Government introduced sex and gender relationships education as a thematic unit for interdisciplinary Health Education activities. However, the diffusion of such programmes remains extremely limited. The present paper discusses how sex and relationships issues are presented in contemporary Greek primary school textbooks since textbooks play a central role in teaching and learning processes. It has been found that textbook references on a particular topic encourage teachers to select this topic for developing and implementing Health Education projects. In this paper the recent educational reform is presented, as well as the general guidelines for the development of the National Curriculum and Health Education Subject Curriculum, the contents of which determined the guidelines for the development of the new primary textbooks. Within this framework, the article discusses how sex education issues are being represented in primary ‘Environmental Studies’/‘Science’ and ‘Mother Tongue’/‘Literat...
- Published
- 2008
80. Transgender and art in the school curriculum
- Author
-
Rebecca Dittman and Pam Meecham
- Subjects
Sexual identity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Teaching method ,Legislation ,Education ,Pedagogy ,Transgender ,Cultural studies ,Homosexuality ,Sociology ,Curriculum ,Citizenship ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
The intention of this paper is two fold. First, it makes explicit a little known and poorly understood area of human experience: transgender. Second, it explores curriculum possibilities opened up by recent legitimating of transgender people through the Gender Recognition Act (2004). The Act foregrounds the necessity for a forum in schools to debate, reflect and understand the full implications of changes to legislation. This paper proposes that, rather than approaching transgender issues through biological science or through the levelling gaze of citizenship, issues of gender identity can be understood without censure through the visual arts. Moreover, the visual arts offer a ‘safe place’ to discuss issues around the body because they allow distance and, in offering visual representations rather than text based work, make visually concrete what science ethically cannot.
- Published
- 2006
81. What does the teaching and learning of sexuality education in South African schools reveal about counter-normative sexualities?
- Author
-
Francis, Dennis A.
- Subjects
DISCOURSE analysis ,CURRICULUM ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,HIGH schools ,INTERVIEWING ,LEARNING ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOL environment ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX education ,STUDENT attitudes ,TEACHERS ,TEACHING ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,ATTITUDES toward sex - Abstract
Using the interlocking concepts of power, knowledge and discourse, this article focuses on how counter normative sexualities are discursively constructed in the sexuality education classroom and with what effects. Drawing on in-depth interviews with teachers and classroom observation, the evidence highlights the presence of specific discourses about the teaching and learning of sexuality diversity. First, while many teachers argued for the inclusion of counter-normative sexualities, in their teaching and responses they privileged heterosexuality as legitimate and natural and same-sex sexualities as deviant and Other. Second, teachers' discourses construct queer youth not only as innocent and childlike but also as hypersexual and rebellious – requiring discipline and intervention. These constructions link closely to discourses of pity and tolerance, or blame when counter-normative sexualities were expressed. Finally, despite heterosexuality being privileged in the classroom, teachers' and pupils' questions about gender and sexuality diversity suggest the need for a more defined and inclusive curriculum sexuality education curriculum. Findings justify concern about how counter-normative sexualities are addressed in the sexuality education classroom and advocate for improvement in teaching and learning about counter-normative sexualities in South African secondary education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. Sex education and transgender youth: 'Trust Means Material By and For Queer and Trans People'.
- Author
-
Bradford, Nova J., DeWitt, James, Decker, Jilyan, Berg, Dianne R., Spencer, Katherine G., and Ross, Michael W.
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX education ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,TRANSGENDER people ,ADOLESCENCE ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The sex education made available to transgender youth has rarely been studied empirically. In this study, we sought to explore the sex education experiences of transgender young people and summarise their recommendations for transgender-inclusive curricula. Qualitative data from 14 transgender youth in the upper-Midwest USA were collected by means of an online questionnaire and group interview. Data was analysed using a consensual qualitative approach. Three themes emerged: (1) sources and reactions to sex education, (2) the importance of trust, and (3) missing information and recommendations. Sources and reactions to sex education included sexual health information sources and the strategies participants employed to supplement the sex education they received. Trust included trustworthy information sources and strong qualities of sexual health resources. Missing information and recommendations included unmet sex education needs, including the scope of information and from whom the information is delivered. Findings suggest that important curricular considerations include the diversity of content, but also the diversity of voices delivering it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. Desire as interruption: young women and sexuality education in Ontario, Canada
- Author
-
Erin Connell
- Subjects
Sexuality education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Gender studies ,Human sexuality ,Policy analysis ,Morality ,Education ,Pleasure ,Content analysis ,Sociology ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Ontario canada ,media_common - Abstract
Danger and pleasure are terms commonly employed to describe women's sexual experiences, including those of young women. This paper explores how young women's sexual danger and pleasure are represented and characterized in official discourses, specifically those of school‐based sexuality education. Drawing on Michelle Fine's four major discourses of sexuality education, this paper uses the Ontario Curriculum and its companion Course Profiles to analyze school‐based sexuality education in Ontario, Canada. This paper describes how the discourses of victimization and individual morality dominate in the curriculum while the discourse of desire is largely absent. Because there is considerable emphasis on danger/victimization and insufficient attention paid to pleasure/desire, the paper concludes by describing how a discourse of desire might be included in sexuality education curriculum.
- Published
- 2005
84. The Hostile Vagina: Reading vaginal discourse in a school health text
- Author
-
Kim J. Elliott
- Subjects
Sexuality education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Gender studies ,Aotearoa ,Education ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reading (process) ,Vagina ,medicine ,Sociology ,School health ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Multiple discourses about vaginas exist in various sites in Aotearoa/New Zealand. School policy and texts express one view by discussing vaginas, when they are mentioned, as functional body parts for the purpose of heterosexual intercourse and reproduction. This paper draws attention to the tensions and fissures in a popular secondary school health text, and examines the meanings the text and images may communicate to young people about vaginas. This paper confirms the missing discourses of erotics and desire (Fine, 1992; Burns, 2000; Allen, 2001) in school-based sexuality education, and the heterosexist viewpoint (Hughes, 1996; Quinlivan, 1996) of many school curricula in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Additionally, this paper acknowledges the importance of the educator's role in supplementing limited text, and concludes that there is a strong justification for a more complex discussion of the vagina in school-based sexuality education, including an analysis of multiple representations of the vagina.
- Published
- 2003
85. What are Little Boys Made Of, Made Of? Victorian Art and the Formation of Gender
- Author
-
Nicholas Addison
- Subjects
Exhibition ,Sexual identity ,Mores ,National identity ,Social history ,Identity (social science) ,Human sexuality ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education - Abstract
Given that educators increasingly have to integrate social and moral education within the general curriculum, this paper considers ways in which the visual arts may or may not be a useful resource for challenging the stereotypical preconceptions about gender and sexual identity held by many people in a post-industrial, intercultural society. Focusing on Tate Britain’s inaugural exhibition for the opening of its new galleries, ‘Exposed: the Victorian Nude’, the paper examines a selection of artefacts that are assumed to represent the sexual mores of Britain at a pivotal time in the construction of its national identity. With reference to the social history of art and feminist theoretical ‘interventions’, the exhibits are analysed as possible evidence of the Victorians’ ‘skills, beliefs and values about sexual relationships, identity and intimacy’ the lifelong study of which provides the Sex Education Forum (1997:1) with a definition of sex education. Subsequently two questions are posed: firstly, what does the exhibition’s selection and hang say about contemporary beliefs? Secondly, can historical artworks be constructively used with young people (post-16) as a catalyst for discussion of sex, gender and sexuality?
- Published
- 2002
86. Sexuality education in New Zealand: a policy for social justice?
- Author
-
Fitzpatrick, Katie
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH promotion ,LEARNING ,POLICY sciences ,SEX education ,SOCIAL justice ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
In 2015, the New Zealand Ministry of Education released a new curriculum policy document for sexuality education in all schools - Sexuality Education: A Guide for Boards of Trustees, Principals and Teachers. This policy is a rare international example of a curriculum document that explicitly values diversity, promotes inclusive school environments, and approaches sexuality education as an area of study (rather than a health promotion intervention). Since its release, the document has, however, gained little attention either of a scholarly nature or in terms of dedicated implementation in schools. One exception is a recent article in this journal by Sarah Garland-Levett, which raises some interesting and important concerns about the possibilities of such policy documents. I follow her lead here and continue the discussion about the place and potential of progressive sexuality education policy, and offer some thoughts about the content and intentions of this text. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. Advocacy for gender minority students: recommendations for school counsellors.
- Author
-
Simons, Jack D., Beck, Matthew J., Asplund, Nancy R., Chan, Christian D., and Byrd, Rebekah
- Subjects
COLLEGE teachers ,COUNSELORS ,CURRICULUM ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,SCHOOLS ,SEX education ,LGBTQ+ people ,TRANSGENDER people - Abstract
Research shows that teachers’ and educators’ responses to gender diversity issues in schools either improves or limits the experiences of students. The school counsellor has an important role to play in this process by working closely with other stakeholders to advocate for transgender, intersex and genderqueer (TIG) students. Following a review of recent developments in the USA, recommendations are made and resources identified to assist school counsellors in validating TIG students, and improving school systems in pursuit of their academic, social and emotional success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Sex and relationships education: a comparison of variation in Northern Ireland’s and England’s policy-making processes.
- Author
-
Wilkinson, Dana Cavender
- Subjects
HISTORY of education policy ,BRITISH education system ,SEX education ,RELATIONSHIP education ,BASIC education ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH education ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Despite Northern Ireland’s deeply rooted religious history and the assumption that its citizens’ sexual attitudes and behaviours are more reserved than their English counterparts, comprehensive school-based relationships and sexuality education (RSE) has been statutory for primary and post-primary pupils since 2007. The non-biological aspects of the subject continue to remain non-statutory for all grade levels in England. This article presents a comparative analysis of the effect Northern Ireland’s and England’s policy-making models and networks have had on the status of sex and relationships education within each country’s respective national curricula. Two main sets of issues are examined: the approaches taken and values upheld by policy actors, and access to ‘policy speak’ and ‘power’ within policy-making networks. Applying thematic and content analysis to official government transcripts, legislative and statutory policy texts and interview data, the article discusses connections among the main points of comparison and suggests that these central differences within Northern Ireland’s and England’s policy-making processes may explain what has been conducive to Northern Ireland’s statutory comprehensive RSE policy development while comprehensive sex education remains controversial in England. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. School education and development of gender perspectives and sexuality in Japan.
- Author
-
Hashimoto, Noriko, Ushitora, Kaori, Morioka, Mari, Motegi, Terunori, Tanaka, Kazue, Tashiro, Mieko, Inoue, Emiko, Ikeya, Hisao, Sekiguchi, Hisashi, Marui, Yoshimi, and Sawamura, Fumika
- Subjects
SEX education ,HUMAN sexuality & society ,GENDER & society ,CURRICULUM ,DIVORCE ,MARRIAGE ,CHILDREN ,TEENAGERS ,MIDDLE school education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate changes in the attitudes of Japan’s post-war youth towards gender equality and sexuality, and to examine whether these attitudes bore a relationship to school education. Different generations were delineated based on changes in courses of study and year of birth, and semi-structured interviews were conducted enquiring about experiences and opinions during secondary school days. We examined sexuality education in both junior high school (ages 12–15 years) and high school (15–18 years), views on premarital sex, views on marriage and divorce, and views on gender roles. Fifty-three survey participants were involved in the study: 30 women and 23 men. The characteristics of each generation were examined in relation to corresponding courses of study and the textbooks available in junior high and high schools, identifying both homologies and differences between the messages courses contained and the expressed beliefs of different generations of informants. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. Effects of a sexual health education programme on school psychological counsellor candidates’ sexism tendencies in Turkey.
- Author
-
Kahraman, Hanife
- Subjects
EDUCATION of student counselors ,SEXUAL health ,SEX education ,SEXISM ,CURRICULUM ,ADULTS ,ADULT education ,EDUCATION ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study examined the effects of a sexual health curriculum developed for school psychological counsellors in Turkey on the sexual health knowledge of the participating candidates, their beliefs in sexual myths and their tendencies towards ambivalent sexism and sexism in romantic relationships. The study adopted a semi-experimental design. Study participants included an experimental group of 59 students from a programme of guidance and psychological counselling in Ege University’s Faculty of Education and a comparison group of 33 students from the Department of Psychology in the Faculty of Letters. Findings suggested that the sexual health education curriculum increased knowledge of sexuality, decreased beliefs in sexual myths, and decreased ambivalent sexism and sexism in romantic relationships among the candidates. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Student support for reproductive health education in middle schools: findings from Lebanon.
- Author
-
Mouhanna, Farah, DeJong, Jocelyn, Afifi, Rima, Asmar, Khalil, Nazha, Bassel, and Zurayk, Huda
- Subjects
TEENAGERS ,MIDDLE school education ,HIV prevention ,AGE distribution ,CHI-squared test ,CHILDREN'S health ,ALCOHOL drinking ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH education ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SEX education for teenagers ,SEXUAL abstinence ,STUDENT attitudes ,SURVEYS ,ADOLESCENT health ,TIME ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,SECONDARY analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,CLUSTER sampling - Abstract
Reproductive health education (RHE) programmes in schools are a well-recognised means of helping young people make informed decisions relating to their sexual health and well-being. Very little research however has investigated attitudes towards such programmes among students in the Arab world. A national HIV education curriculum was developed in Lebanon in 2005. However, in the context of competing priorities and mixed levels of social resistance, curriculum implementation to date is far from universal. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of support for school-based RHE and the main factors associated with such support among young people aged 11–16 years in Lebanon. A secondary analysis of data from the 2011 Global school-based Student Health Survey (GSHS) was conducted. Students who supported RHE (58.1%) were more likely to be of higher grade level (adjusted OR [Odds Ratio] = 1.78,p-value = 0.005), to have ever drunk alcohol (adjusted OR = 1.52,p-value = 0.012), to prefer mixed classes for RHE (adjusted OR = 3.19,p-value < 0.0001), to say RHE should start before or at puberty (adjusted OR = 3.57,p-value < 0.0001), and to be exposed to more health education topics in school (adjusted OR = 1.2,p-value < 0.0001). Identifying such sub-groups in the student body should inform the equitable implementation of RHE in culturally diverse settings like Lebanon. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. The broad effectiveness of seventy-four field instances of abstinence-based programming.
- Author
-
Birch, Paul James, White, Joseph M., and Fellows, Kaylene
- Subjects
ABSTINENCE-only sex education ,ASSESSMENT of education ,CHILDREN ,TEENAGERS ,BASIC education ,CURRICULUM ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX education - Abstract
Evaluations of a large federally funded sexual risk avoidance education (SRAE) efforts in the USA have not been widely reported in the wake of funding cuts. The purpose of this study is to report results from a broad set of programmes to demonstrate the breadth of field effectiveness of these programmes. Twenty-seven separate community-based SRAE programmes were evaluated from 2005 to 2010, comprising 74 separate evaluations and involving over 96,000 young people. Pre- to post-effect sizes on key attitudinal predictors of sexual activity were analysed using meta-analytic techniques, both individually and as an average composite score. The standardised change score effect size on the composite measure were small and statistically significant (d = 0.20,k = 75,p < 0.001), as were effects on individual measures (d = 0.15–0.31). Programmes using a single curriculum showed greater results than those using their own blend of two or more curricula. As a group, this large body of field implementations of SRAE appears to have produced modest but statistically significant effects on key predictors of sexual activity in youth. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. ‘ We’ve got a lack of family values ’: an examination of how teachers formulate and justify their approach to teaching sex and relationships education.
- Author
-
Abbott, Keeley, Ellis, Sonja J., and Abbott, Rachel
- Subjects
SEX education ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,DISCOURSE analysis ,CURRICULUM planning ,COMMUNITIES ,CURRICULUM ,FAMILIES ,HIGH schools ,SEXUAL health ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NEEDS assessment ,RESEARCH ,ROLE models ,STATISTICAL sampling ,HUMAN sexuality ,TEACHERS ,FAMILY relations ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
Sex and Relationship Education (SRE) in England has been the focus of critical scrutiny on several occasions, but there has been little attention paid to how teachers formulate their provision, especially given their crucial role in determining what is taught in the classroom. While current policy suggests that provision should be inclusive of sexual diversity, it simultaneously gives educators the scope to determine the form this takes. This is an important issue given the substantial impact that teachers’ views and discourses have on what is taught. Using a discourse analytical framework, this study sought to examine how teachers of SRE formulate and account for their provision, with a particular focus on how their assumptions about young people’s sexual health needs underpin their actions. Initially, teachers sought to formulate their activities in terms of an overall ethos, providing legitimacy for the key elements of their programme being aligned with official government health promotion strategy, as opposed to other areas such as pleasure and diversity. This was supported by their constructions of young people, particularly young women and individuals from ‘at risk’ communities, as being particularly vulnerable. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Scaling up sexuality education in Senegal: integrating family life education into the national curriculum.
- Author
-
Chau, Katie, Traoré Seck, Aminata, Chandra-Mouli, Venkatraman, and Svanemyr, Joar
- Subjects
SEX education ,EDUCATION ,SCALING (Social sciences) ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,FAMILY life education ,NATIONAL curriculum ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,CURRICULUM ,HUMAN services programs ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Sex Education is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. LGBTQ-inclusive curricula: why supportive curricula matter.
- Author
-
Snapp, Shannon D., McGuire, Jenifer K., Sinclair, Katarina O., Gabrion, Karlee, and Russell, Stephen T.
- Abstract
There is growing attention to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning (LGBTQ) issues in schools, including efforts to address such issues through the curriculum. This study examines whether students’ perceptions of personal safety and school climate safety are stronger when curricula that include LGBTQ people are present and supportive. LGBTQ and straight middle and high school students from California (1232 students from 154 schools) participated in the 2008 Preventing School Harassment survey. They reported their experience of LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum, its level of supportiveness and perceptions of safety. Multilevel methods allowed for an examination of differences between individuals in the same school while controlling for differences between schools. LGBTQ-inclusive curricula were associated with higher reports of safety at the individual and school levels, and lower levels of bullying at the school level. The amount of support also mattered: supportive curricula were related to feeling safer and awareness of bullying at the individual and school levels. The implications of school- versus student-level results for educational policy and practices are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. Measuring the quality of sexuality education implementation at the school level in low- and middle-income countries
- Author
-
Melissa Stillman, Ana Silvia Monzón, Ellie Leong, Kofi Awusabo-Asare, Sarah C. Keogh, Angélica Motta, and Estelle M. Sidze
- Subjects
index ,validity ,Economic growth ,Latin Americans ,media_common.quotation_subject ,curriculum ,Human sexuality ,Ghana ,teacher training ,Education ,human experiment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Political science ,Peru ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#5.00.00 [https] ,parasitic diseases ,middle income country ,Quality (business) ,human ,School level ,implementation ,Curriculum ,media_common ,reliability ,030505 public health ,Sexuality education ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#5.03.00 [https] ,05 social sciences ,article ,Guatemala ,Kenya ,teaching ,sexuality ,monitoring ,Latin America ,validation process ,050903 gender studies ,Low and middle income countries ,Africa ,measurement ,0509 other social sciences ,Comparative education ,0305 other medical science ,scientist ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) is a key component of efforts to improve sexual and reproductive outcomes for young people. While many governments have established policies and curricula for CSE, there are no quantitative measures of the quality of their implementation in schools. We describe the construction of a school-level index to measure CSE implementation quality using data from Peru, Guatemala, Kenya and Ghana for validation. The composite index represents seven key components of a successful programme: range of topics, values imparted, teaching methods, teacher training, resources available, monitoring and evaluation, and the school environment. These components are combined into two sub-indices (curriculum content and implementation context), which together provide a summary index of implementation quality. We present scores for the seven components, the two sub-indices and the summary index for each country. Ghana scored highest on the summary index, while Guatemala scored lowest, but country rankings varied within the different components. The paper discusses the implications of the findings for improving school-based CSE in these countries. An assessment of the validity and reliability of the index indicates it can be used in other settings and could be a useful tool for educationalists, researchers and programme implementers to measure CSE implementation quality.
- Published
- 2019
97. School-based primary school sexuality education for migrant children in Beijing, China.
- Author
-
Liu, Wenli and Su, Yufen
- Subjects
CHILDREN ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,PREVENTION of child sexual abuse ,TEACHER education ,HEALTH education ,CHILDREN'S health ,CURRICULUM ,NOMADS ,PARENTS ,SCHOOL children ,SEX education ,ADOLESCENT health ,TEXTBOOKS ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
In May 2007, Beijing Normal University launched a programme of school-based sexuality education for migrant children in Xingzhi Primary School in Beijing. Over the past seven years, the project team has developed a school-based sexuality education curriculum using the International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education published by UNESCO. The team has developed 12 volumes of textbooks for grades 1–6; trained teachers to deliver sexuality education using participatory teaching methods; and involved parents in the sexuality education process. The first group of migrant students to receive the full 6 years of sexuality education graduated in June 2013. Sexuality education in schools is gaining increasing attention and help from many sectors of Chinese society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. What's missing? Anti-racist sex education!
- Author
-
Whitten, Amanda and Sethna, Christabelle
- Subjects
TEENAGERS ,SECONDARY education ,SEX education ,CONTENT analysis ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH education ,CULTURAL pluralism ,RACE ,RACISM ,CULTURAL competence - Abstract
Contemporary sexual health curricula in Canada include information about sexual diversity and queer identities, but what remains missing is any explicit discussion of anti-racist sex education. Although there exists federal and provincial support for multiculturalism and anti-racism in schools, contemporary Canadian sex education omits crucial anti-racist work, and foundational anti-racist education frameworks are silent about the sex education curriculum. To show how race is discussed in sex education, a content analysis based on a keyword search of Ontario public secondary school health provincial curricula and federal sex education policy was conducted. English language curricula created within the same nine-year range (1999–2008) were selected from Ontario and Canada to maximise the congruency of politics and country of origin. Content analysis findings point to major deficiencies and provide the basis for future anti-racist sex education policy recommendations. As anti-racism critically examines the institution of education, and sexual health curricula are an increasingly politicised example of potentially transformative education, anti-racism must be incorporated into future sex education work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Primary schools and the delivery of relationships and sexuality education: the experience of Queensland teachers.
- Author
-
Johnson, Rebecca L., Sendall, Marguerite C., and McCuaig, Louise A.
- Subjects
SCHOOL children ,ELEMENTARY education ,CONFIDENCE ,CURRICULUM ,ELEMENTARY schools ,FOCUS groups ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SEX education ,JUDGMENT sampling ,NATIONAL competency-based educational tests ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes - Abstract
Primary school provides an appropriate opportunity for children to commence comprehensive relationships and sexuality education (RSE), yet many primary school teachers avoid teaching this subject area. In the absence of teacher confidence and competence, schools have often relied on health promotion professionals, external agencies and/or one-off issue-related presentations rather than cohesive, systematic and meaningful health education. This study examines the implementation of a 10-lesson pilot RSE unit of work and an accompanying assessment task in two primary schools in South-East Queensland, Australia. Drawing predominantly from qualitative data, the research explores the experiences of primary school teachers as they engage with RSE curriculum resources and content delivery. The results show the provision of a high-quality RSE curriculum resource grounded in contemporary educational principles and practices enables teachers to feel more confident to deliver RSE and minimises potential barriers such as parental objections and fear of mishandling sensitive content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Finding possibilities in the impossible: a celebratory narrative of trans youth experiences in the Southeastern USA
- Author
-
Stephanie Anne Shelton and Aryah O. S. Lester
- Subjects
Sexual identity ,030505 public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Biography ,Gender studies ,Peer relationships ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Transgender ,Narrative ,Sociology ,0305 other medical science ,Empowerment ,0503 education ,Curriculum ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Using collective biographical narrative, this paper examines the ways in which school spaces – even in socioculturally and politically conservative locations – might serve to empower trans youth. T...
- Published
- 2018
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.