The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Update P.E.I.’s sexual education curriculum

- BY KARLA BERNARD GUEST OPINION Karla Bernard is the education critic for the Green Party of P.E.I.

“Sexuality is a part of our humanity and an integral part of who we are as individual­s. Good, current curriculum recognizes this and promotes nurturance, understand­ing, appreciati­on, knowledge and community.”

In Jane Ledwell’s opinion piece printed in the Guardian on the first anniversar­y of the #Metoo movement, she asks the question – “what can we do?” One solution she provides is to develop good, sound policy. In light of recent headline news, it is more important than ever to connect the dots and draw the lines between education, awareness and behaviour.

Schools are the ideal place to educate and talk about important social issues and offer support for addressing them at the root. This past summer a wonderful offer was extended to the minister of education, Jordan Brown, on behalf of all Island children. In their open letter, “Update P.E.I.’s SexEd Curriculum – Let Us Help,” the PEERS Alliance, P.E.I. Advisory Council on the Status of Women and Women’s Network P.E.I. strongly urged Minister Brown to update P.E.I.’s sexual education curriculum and offered to contribute their expertise to this process. Disappoint­ingly, the government’s response was dismissive, claiming that the curriculum was “reviewed last year.”

Updating the sexual education curriculum and policies surroundin­g it is one simple way we could have a crucial positive impact; an impact that would have a ripple effect into the future and one that would cross all social spheres: education, judicial, health and social services.

Although I am encouraged that the leader in health and physical health curriculum, Maribeth Rogers Neale, has helped to create supplement­s to our current curriculum, we require more than supplement­s. We need to revamp our whole sexual health curriculum and way of delivery so that it serves the most basic needs of our students and supports our teachers so that they are comfortabl­e in delivering the curriculum.

An evidence-based, well-developed sexual health curriculum is essential for raising children who will engage in healthy relationsh­ips and respect diversity in Island life. As a Sexuality and Reproducti­ve Health Facilitato­r at the Sexuality Education Resource Centre Manitoba explains, “...It is about how our mental, physical, emotional and spiritual selves interact in terms of our sexuality and our understand­ing of ourselves.

It is about mental health, reproducti­ve rights, birth control access, consent, bodies, healthy relationsh­ips, body image, ... social justice and all of the things that affect our bodies and relationsh­ips.” Sexuality is a part of our humanity and an integral part of who we are as individual­s. Good, current curriculum recognizes this and promotes nurturance, understand­ing, appreciati­on, knowledge and community.

I thank the PEERS Alliance, P.E.I. Advisory Council on the Status of Women and Women’s Network P.E.I. for taking on this crucial work. Updating this curriculum in collaborat­ion with school personnel, community organizati­ons, students and parents is the right and responsibl­e thing to do and to accept this offer of collaborat­ion just makes sense!

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada