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24 October 2008

Compulsory Lessons about personal, social and health matters including sex.

Lessons about personal, social and health matters including sex and relationships will be compulsory in all England’s schools from ages five to 16.

But the government is setting up a review of how best to achieve this, saying there are "complicated issues".

Schools Minister Jim Knight said this would factor in the ethos of schools, pupils’ needs and parents’ values.

A BBC poll of more than 1,000 people found two thirds would support sex lessons from the age of 11.

Reviews of education about sex and relationships and about drugs and alcohol were ordered after ministers said teaching was "patchy".

What they have not yet given is the detail of what compulsory personal, social and health education (PSHE) will involve, to allow local flexibility.

 

The Department for Children, Schools and Families said the review of sex lessons had identified "a need to challenge the perception that sex and relationships education happened in a ‘moral vacuum’ in schools and says that parents and schools can and should work together to decide how best topics should be taught."

It said updated guidance would also be produced covering the content of the PSHE curriculum, based on the existing non-statutory programme.

Lessons should be "age appropriate". In primary schools, Sir Jim Rose would look at how PSHE should best be delivered as part of his ongoing review of the curriculum.

The new review of how to make PSHE compulsory will be led by a London head teacher, Sir Alasdair MacDonald.

Mr Knight told BBC News: "We are not suggesting that five and six-year-olds should be taught sex.

"What we are saying is we need to improve in particular the relationship education, improve the moral framework and moral understanding around which we then talk about sex later on in a child’s education."

‘Brilliant’

He said what schools would have to follow would be a high-level "programme of study". But it would still be up to schools to decide what to teach.

"Faith groups for example will want to produce supplementary guidance on top of our guidance, in order to say to their own schools … how they should then deliver that programme of study in a way that’s sympathetic to their moral beliefs, their faith beliefs in those schools."

The Catholic Education Service for England and Wales said it supported the priority given to establishing a "values context" for all sex and relationships teaching, the recognition of the importance of the role of parents, and the clear expectation that lessons would be shaped by Catholic teaching.

The chief executive of the sexual health charity Brook, Simon Blake, said the news that PSHE was to be a statutory part of the national curriculum was "absolutely brilliant".

He added: "Now, at last, we can put the systems in place to give teachers and others the training and support they need to work effectively in partnership with children, young people and their parents."

   

The head of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), John Dunford, has written to the government complaining that secondary schools have only just begun implementing major changes to the curriculum including highly regarded but non-statutory material on PSHE.

"In ASCL’s view it would be extremely detrimental to make PSHE compulsory or to change the revised secondary curriculum orders in any way at this point," he wrote.

It was not just a subject on the timetable.

"It is part of the ethos of the school, helping to develop the young person in ways that schools deem most appropriate to their circumstances.

"It should not be the subject to further central prescription and certainly not compulsion."

Consultation

The sex education teaching requirements placed on schools at present are limited.

In primary schools, sex education is covered as part of the science curriculum.

This tells children about the main body parts and explains that reproduction is one of the life processes common to all animals including humans.

In secondary school, again mainly through science lessons, children cover the human reproductive cycle, including adolescence, fertilisation and foetal development.

 

They may also learn - though there is no statutory requirement that they should - about relationship skills, rights and responsibilities and different types of relationships, contraception, pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections and risky behaviours.

In Wales, sex and relationship education is already part of the curriculum and it is a legal requirement in Northern Ireland.

There is no legal requirement in Scotland.

The UK Youth Parliament says four out of 10 young people say they received no relationship education at school.

Earlier this year, figures were released showing that the number of abortions performed in the UK on girls under 16 had risen by 10% in 2007.

A UK-wide poll commissioned by the BBC from NOP found that the majority of those questioned believed sex and relationship lessons should be compulsory in schools.

Of those, 64% believed lessons should not start until children are at least 11 years old.

Just over a third (36%) said they did not think children should learn about contraception until they were at least 13.

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15 August 2008

Public ‘over-worried by bullying’

The general public is over-concerned by the problem of bullying in England’s schools, research suggests.

Some 80% of people surveyed for the Department for Children, Schools and Families thought it was a big problem.

However, 84% of parents and 75% of young people aged 10 to 19 did not think it a problem; 60% of youngsters saying the situation was improving.

Researchers interviewed 3,000 children, parents and members of the general public on growing up in England.

As a rule, young people and parents were more positive about growing up in England than the general public.

Achievement gap

But the majority of all three groups said they felt England was a good country to grow up in, with 90% of young people, 74% of parents and 71% of the general public agreeing with the statement.

And a high proportion of young people (83%) felt schools and colleges prepared them very or quite well for working life.

This compared with 57% of parents and 53% of the general public.

There was also a difference between the views of all three audiences on the quality of publicly-funded education.

Across all three groups, secondary schools were not rated as highly as primary schools and nurseries.

But the majority of all groups - 66% of general public, 74% of parents and 88% of young people - rated secondary schools as good.

More facilities

Both adults and young people agreed that disadvantaged youngsters faced greater hurdles than their richer peers.

Some 80% of parents and the general public said it was more difficult for low income students to go to university. And 74% of young people felt the same.

England’s Schools Secretary Ed Balls said he was pleased so many children, young people and parents were positive about England being a good country in which to grow up.

"But we still haven’t reached our aim of becoming the best in the world.

"In the Children’s Plan we set out how we can do that with investment in play and youth activities and by making sure young people have excellent education and are put on the path to success."

It was vital that the government listen to parents, young people and children’s views as it made policy, he added.

Last year a report for children’s charity Unesco placed the UK at the bottom of a league table for child well-being across 21 industrialised countries.

The report was based on 40 indicators including poverty, family relationships, and health from the years 2000-03.

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