The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

METRO SCHOOL ADD LESSON ON CONSENT

Sex ed grapples with issues recognizin­g that ‘no’ means ‘no.’

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

In a growing number of metro Atlanta classrooms, as the world outside grapples with high-profile sexual assault allegation­s and the ramificati­ons, students are hearing more about consent.

The sharper focus comes amid the #MeToo movement, as accusation­s have piled up against powerful men in business, media, entertainm­ent and government

— including most recently Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

The conversati­on has spilled over into schools, where sex education ignites fierce debates over values, religion and what should be taught in class versus what is best broached at home.

In Georgia, state rules require sex ed to emphasize abstinence until marriage. Yet more detailed discus- sions about what it means to agree freely to sexual activity are becoming more com- mon, though some fear such talk might make teens think it’s OK to have sex.

“We decided ... several weeks ago that consent was something that we needed to talk about because of conversati­ons that those teachers were having in the classroom,” said Paul Scott, health and physical education coordinato­r for Clayton County Public Schools. “It’s more relevant to the students, I think, because it’s in the news. They hear those things, and they are having those conversati­ons.”

A new state law requires districts to educate kindergart­en through ninth-grade students about sexual abuse and prevention.

And, the Atlanta-based publisher of a popular absti- nence-centered curriculum used by more than 30 Geor- gia school districts is about to roll out an expanded lesson with more specif- ics about what does and does not constitute sexual consent.

The state gives school districts plenty of leeway in how to teach sex ed. Like most states, Georgia’s learning standards do not specif- ically use the word “consent.”

Some advocates want schools to teach more about consent, saying it’s a crit- ical concept that schools uniquely are positioned to address.

“These kids are con- fused,” said Jaime Winfree, a parent of two Gwinnett stu- dents and director of Gwinnett Citizens for Comprehens­ive Sex Education. “I have to sit down and have Brett Kavanaugh conversati­ons with my 11-year-old. They are going to see this stuff, so do we let them interpret it on their own? Or do we help them understand?”

Others are receptive to consent being taught in an abstinence-centered cur- riculum but are wary of the way it may be framed and of politics pushing into the classroom.

“This whole area is just rife for indoctrina­tion on one side or another, which is one reason why the bulk of this ought to be done in fam- ilies rather than in school,” said Jane Robbins, an Atlanta attorney and senior fellow at the conservati­ve American Principles Project. “I think it depends on how you are approachin­g it.”

She opposes starting from an “affirmativ­e standpoint” that includes negotiatin­g sexual activity and “getting to yes.”

“That attitude is prob- lematic, that consent alone or consent coupled with contracept­ion is ... healthy behavior,” she said. “We know that the healthiest behavior for teenagers is abstinence.”

Abstinence is at the core of the “Choosing the Best” curriculum used by seven of the state’s 10 largest school districts, including Fulton, Gwinnett and Clay- ton. An expanded lesson will be available to schools next month that provides more detail about consent. According to three pages the publisher provided to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, it uses fill-in-the-blank exercises and includes state- ments for teachers to read.

For example: “Consent is clear (not uncertain), coher- ent (not compromise­d by drinking or drugs), willing (agreeable to what’s happening), mutual (both parties feel the same way), and ongoing (consent from yesterday does not mean con- sent today. Consent has to be present each time an activity is considered.)”

The age of consent in Georgia is 16, and the lesson stresses that those younger cannot legally consent to sexual activity.

Marcia Papst, a spokes- woman for Choosing the Best Publishing, said in an email that the curriculum already covers consent in the context of preventing sexual violence, stresses that assault is never the victim’s fault and teaches students that “both males and females can be victims of sexual violence if sexual activities occur without mutual consent.”

The company added new material because “students could benefit from a greater understand­ing” of the topic, she said.

Winfree’s group h as tried unsuccessf­ully to get Gwinnett to drop the absti- nence-centered program. She said its inadequate discussion of consent is just one of her many concerns. “All the onus is put on the girls. It is her job to protect her virginity from those boys,” Winfree said.

Gwinnett spokesman Bernard Watson said the district hasn’t reviewed the new Choosing the Best lesson but said its curriculum already addresses consent and coercion. It includes setting boundaries, resisting “persuasive tactics” and explaining sexual assault.

The F ulton s chool board will vote Thursday on expanding sex-education materials to include a 34-minute video teachers could show to high schoolers that defines consent and sexual assault.

In the video, a young woman looks directly at the camera and minces no words: “At the heart of consent is the idea that we all have the right to clearly say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to any sexual encounter.”

She and other sexual assault survivors share their stories alongside experts explaining what consent means.

“It’s like expressed per- mission that what’s happening right now is equally cool with the both of us,” says a psychologi­st featured in the video.

It tells students they can’t assume someone has agreed to sexual activity based on how they look, their body language or previous sexual activity or if they are silent, immobile or incapacita­ted.

F ulton’s health edu- cation advisory committee approved adding the video in February. Many who reviewed it and provided anonymous feedback praised it, though one comment suggested parents should be notified first “so they can have conversati­ons at home.” Others credited its “helpful and practical tips” and said students “need this informatio­n before they get to college.”

Clayton schools are placing more emphasis on con- sent, and not just in terms of sexual activity. Scott said students are taught how to set personal boundaries and avoid peer pressure.

He acknowledg­ed there can be “a little bit of push and pull” by urging consent while also promoting abstinence.

“I have teachers who are uncomforta­ble with teaching it, of course they are,” he said. “I don’t want to do a disservice to students by just teaching abstinence and not teaching real-world applicatio­n.”

Atlanta and DeKalb school districts use a sex-ed cur- riculum that’s broader in scope than abstinence-cen- tered programs. An Atlanta spokesman pointed to a segment that stresses the responsibi­lity “to verify that all sexual contact is consen- sual.” Students also learn that consent is necessary before engaging in a sexual activity even if they are married or dating.

The Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Power and Potential trains teachers to provide comprehens­ive sex education that includes the topic of consent. Even among school districts doing that, there’s been more discussion about sexual violence, said Shelley Francis Travis, vice president of programs.

Part of that is due to the state law passed this year that mandates lessons and instructor training on sexual abuse prevention.

School districts should be selecting materials now to meet the new requiremen­t of Senate Bill 401, said Therese McGuire, program specialist in health and physical education for the Georgia Department of Education. Some may determine they are already in compliance.

But even before the new law, Francis Travis said the discussion around preventing sexual violence had amplified: “Every single day in the news, there’s a story about it.”

She said: “Young people need to know that they have a right to say what happens to their bodies, that they have a right to determine what they do and set boundaries.”

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