The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario reverting to old sex-ed curriculum in fall

- NICOLE THOMPSON AND SHAWN JEFFORDS Canadian Press With files from Daniela Germano

TORONTO — Ontario schools will go back to teaching the same sex-ed curriculum they did in the late 1990s this fall after the province’s new government announced Wednesday it was revoking an updated version brought in by the previous regime.

Just over a week into the summer break, Education Minister Lisa Thompson said ministry staff were working to inform school boards of the decision to revert to the curriculum that was in place before 2015.

The older curriculum will remain in effect until the government completes a “fulsome consultati­on respecting parents” on how to modernize the material, she said.

The newer sex-ed curriculum sparked controvers­y, particular­ly among social conservati­ves, when the Liberal government introduced it three years ago.

It was the first time the curriculum had been updated since 1998, and it included warnings about online bullying and sexting that were not in the previous version. But protesters zeroed in on discussion­s of same-sex marriage, gender identity and masturbati­on.

The updated document has its supporters, however, including tens of thousands of people who signed a petition to save it after the Tories — who vowed to scrap it during the election campaign — were elected last month.

A group also paid for a threemetre-long sign defending the curriculum that was parked outside the legislatur­e Wednesday.

“Dear PC MPPs,” the sign read. “Don’t let the religious right hijack sex-ed.”

Ontario’s two largest teachers’ unions said they oppose the decision, noting that parents and educators were consulted extensivel­y before the curriculum was updated.

Sam Hammond, president of the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, said the move is a “huge disservice” to students, who need to learn about critical issues such as consent.

What’s more, given the amount of input teachers, experts and parents had in the update, any new consultati­ons are likely to give a similar result, Hammond said.

He encouraged parents to call on Thompson to save the updated curriculum.

The decision also doesn’t leave teachers much time to alter their plans for the fall semester, said Harvey Bischof, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation.

“Nobody wants to be unprepared, it’s certainly not the best approach to classroom practice to make last-minute decisions or to have last-minute decisions foisted upon our members,” he said.

“And so it doesn’t feel like a thoughtful approach, it feels like a bit of a knee-jerk reaction.”

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