Friday, 27 February 2015

Sex Education For Primary School Children


Parents, please read this ridiculous article below culled from BBC news where MPs are suggesting we now make sex education a compulsory subject for children in primary school. As it stands, parents are given the option whether they want their children to be taught sex education or not. I believe the curriculum is tailored to the class of the children and teachers are to highlight the importance of healthy relationships, contraceptives etc.

Irrespective of what was written, I strongly believe that primary or even secondary school teachers have no business teaching our 5 year old babies sex education in school. Anything that they need to learn can be taught to them at home by their parents. We are their first life teachers and that will never change. We know them better than the government. They should focus more on teaching them and encouraging them on the core subjects we sent them to school to learn. It is paramount as parents to educate our children on sex the way we deem fit and especially when it is the appropriate time for our children. Sex education should never be a compulsory subject to our kids. They are kids and the government should allow them to be kids without putting thoughts and ideas about sex into their heads at a very tender age. Parents, we need to educate our own children on sex when they are ready, when they are older. The government should really allow the parents to chose whether sex education should be made compulsory. Unfortunately, if it is taught anyway, the children of those that opt in will only discuss it with the children that opt out when they are in the playground. Our children learn from what they see around them. They are all curious by nature. You need to remember that children are like sponges. They soak up all the water (information) they are provided with. I'll stop here for now but I will say this - Be careful as to what you expose them to. They are our responsibility and the success or failure of our children in any area of their life is all down to us as their parents not the government, the school or the society they live in. It is all down to us. So as parents, we should guide them rightly with wisdom and understanding. The Bible says "Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6 KJV). In our own way, let's educate our children in the way of the Lord. At home, pray with them, study the Bible with them, teach them the Word. We are their most important teachers. If you don't, you are practically leaving them wide open to the outside world to teach them and confuse them.


All state primary and secondary schools in England should have to teach sex-and-relationships education (SRE), MPs have said in a report. 
The Commons Education Committee's inquiry was launched after Ofsted found more than a third of schools were failing to provide age-appropriate SRE.
Committee chairman Graham Stuart MP said "young people have a right to information that will keep them safe".
The government said it would consider the findings carefully.

'Lack of clarity'

In 2013, Ofsted reported that personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE), of which SRE is a part, required improvement in 40% of schools. 
The MPs said: "This situation would not be tolerated in other subjects, and yet the government's strategy for improving PSHE is weak.
"There is mismatch between the priority that ministers claim they give to PSHE and the steps taken to improve its delivery in schools," they added.
In particular, they said, there was a lack of clarity on the status of the subject.
The committee said the subject should be given statutory status.
This call is echoed in a wide-ranging report from the Office of the Children's Commissioner, published on Tuesday.
Deputy Commissioner Sue Berelowitz said "age-appropriate relationships and sex education" should be made a statutory part of the school curriculum.

The report from the Commons committee noted primary schools were not required to provide sex-and-relationships education beyond the basic biology dictated by the national curriculum, while at secondary level the national curriculum required schools to cover sexually transmitted diseases with 14- to 16-year-olds. 
It said academies and free schools (about half of schools) were not bound by the national curriculum, though all schools must have regard to government guidance from 2000 if they teach the subject. 
The current position meant the relationships aspect of the subject may be particularly squeezed, the report said. 
The committee said the subject's lack of statutory status meant it was too often sidelined, with teachers denied continuous professional training. 
It recommended:
  • the Department for Education develops a "work plan" for introducing age-appropriate PSHE and SRE as statutory subjects in primary and secondary schools
  • the government endorses and publishes updated guidance on SRE from subject specialists
  • Ofsted resumes regular surveys of PSHE provision
  • schools consult regularly with parents on SRE provision, with parents retaining the right to withdraw their child
  • SRE be renamed Relationships and Sex Education 

'Vital' role

Mr Stuart said there was overwhelming demand from teachers, parents and young people for SRE to become compulsory. 
"SRE forms an important part of any school's efforts to safeguard young people from abuse and is particularly needed to protect the most vulnerable children," he said.
"PSHE builds character and resilience and will help young people to live happy and healthy lives."
A Department for Education spokeswoman said high-quality PSHE teaching played a vital role in developing young people's personal and emotional wellbeing, "supporting them to make informed choices and stay safe".
"That's why we are working with schools and experts to ensure the PSHE and relationships education that young people receive is appropriate and of a high standard," she said.
"We have already set up a new expert subject group on PSHE to identify key areas where teachers need further support."
However Sarah Carter, from the campaign group, the Family Education Trust believes many parents would be "horrified" by the materials used to teach sex education in primary school.
"It is not often age appropriate," she says. "Children develop at different ages, they have different levels of maturity.
"It would be our recommendation that parents always check what's being taught."
Lucy Emmerson, co-ordinator of the Sex Education Forum, said sex education was neglected in too many schools and urged all political parties to make a manifesto commitment to change the law to make the subject statutory. 
PSHE Association chief executive Joe Hayman said statutory status for the subject would be "a huge step forward". 
Shadow Education Secretary Tristram Hunt said Labour would make age-appropriate sex and relationship education compulsory in all state schools. 
"Children and young people should be taught the importance of respect and healthy relationships and to understand the role of the family - in all its forms," said Mr Hunt.
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