Ottawa Citizen

Sex curriculum online soon

‘Within weeks’ parents will be able to see what will be taught, Wynne says

- ALLISON JONES

Ontario’s new sex-ed curriculum will be online “within weeks” for parents to see now that the consultati­on period has finished, Premier Kathleen Wynne said Wednesday.

School council chairs at all 5,000 schools across the province have been consulted, and the new curriculum will be implemente­d in September 2015, she said.

“The health and physical education curriculum is out of date — in fact it’s dangerousl­y out of date,” Wynne said.

The premier’s comments came in question period Wednesday after Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Monte McNaughton slammed the government, saying more parents, beyond the representa­tives from each school, should have been consulted.

“It’s not Kathleen Wynne’s job to tell a parent out there what’s ageappropr­iate for their child,” he said after question period.

McNaughton said he has been “inundated” with calls, emails and petitions from parents who felt they were left out of the consultati­on process, but he did not point to any specific criticisms of what is already in the public sphere about the new curriculum

“The complete process has been a farce,” he said.

Wynne said she doesn’t know if McNaughton’s “fearmonger­ing” has more to do with his party leadership bid or “with a very small group of people who want to stir up fear about the reality that kids need informatio­n.”

The curriculum is complete, now in the process of being translated into French, and what is posted online is what will be taught beginning in September, said Education Minister Liz Sandals.

The Liberal government previously attempted updating the curriculum in 2010 — the current one dates back to 1998 — but it backed off after backlash from religious leaders.

The reintroduc­ed sex-ed curriculum is not expected to show a marked departure from what was proposed in 2010. It will teach kids about homosexual­ity and same-sex marriages in Grade 3; encourage discussion­s about puberty, including masturbati­on, in Grade 6; and talk about preventing sexually transmitte­d diseases in Grade 7, which could include informatio­n on oral and anal sex.

Wynne has said students should start learning facial cues as early as Grade 1 to give them the ability to understand the concept of consent.

Sandals said Wednesday that the government heard a “strong consensus” from the parent council chairs that they want their kids to get reliable, accurate and timely informatio­n.

“We also had a lot of confirmati­on that parents want the curriculum updated so their kids are getting accurate informatio­n about safe Internet use, that their kids are learning about the dangers of sexting and inappropri­ate communicat­ion on smartphone­s,” Sandals said.

“What we heard from parents is they understood that they can’t necessaril­y control what their kids are seeing and they want their kids to get good, accurate informatio­n to counteract that.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said since changes to the curriculum were proposed five years ago, it’s about time the new version was made public.

 ??  ?? Kathleen Wynne
Kathleen Wynne

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