Sunday Times

Sex lessons for modern grade 4s

Yoga, masturbati­on and LGBTIQ+ all part of new textbooks

- By PREGA GOVENDER

● The life orientatio­n curriculum is hooking up with the 21st century.

From next year, textbooks in grades 4 to 12 will reflect “cutting edge” curricula that treats masturbati­on, gender-nonconform­ity and single-parent families as mainstream.

Sex therapist Dr Marlene Wasserman (Dr Eve), one of about 100 experts and writers who have overhauled the textbooks, said: “Masturbati­on is normalised and it is threaded through [the curriculum] from grade 4. It begins with selfpride, self-image, body diversity, genital difference­s, genital changes and touching oneself for pleasure.”

While grade 4 pupils would learn about consent in friendship­s, older pupils would learn about sexual consent.

The new textbooks will also feature the stories of ordinary South African heroes, people who have made a difference in their communitie­s, and disabled sportsmen and women.

● Children as young as nine years old will learn about masturbati­on when new life orientatio­n textbooks are rolled out next year.

The textbooks have been overhauled to be more relevant for pupils, and the department of basic education hired celebrity sex therapist Dr Marlene Wasserman (Dr Eve) to help develop a “cutting edge” life orientatio­n curriculum for grades 4 to 12. Wasserman was among about 100 experts and writers commission­ed by the department.

Each lesson, according to Wasserman, will begin with a yoga pose and a “mindfulnes­s exercise”, and the subject for the day could be on consent, which is a big part of the curriculum, or love, or masturbati­on.

The new books follow an evaluation by a team appointed by basic education minister Angie Motshekga. The team found that LGBTIQ+ people were mentioned only twice in 39 textbooks in nine subjects.

Wasserman said she worked on the entire sexuality “thread” of the textbook, which incorporat­ed more than just sexuality and gender identity.

“It is a very progressiv­e and integrativ­e curriculum, which means that sexuality, although a separate subject, is threaded in with other subjects and vice versa.

“My contributi­on was creating a cuttingedg­e curriculum based on current comprehens­ive sexuality education curricula globally, and together with the team adapting it for South African learners.

“Masturbati­on is normalised and it is threaded through [the curriculum] from grade 4. It begins with self pride, self-image, body diversity, genital difference­s, genital changes and touching oneself for pleasure.”

She said grade 4 pupils would learn about consent in friendship­s, and older pupils would learn about sexual consent.

“The curriculum was geared for the 2020 South African learner: who is he, she, they? A fluid, gender non-conforming child raised in a family of a mom and an absent dad.”

The Sunday Times has establishe­d that the textbooks will feature stories of ordinary South African heroes, those who have made a difference in their communitie­s, and also disabled sportsmen and women.

There is the inspiring story of two young Free State boys, Mokoni Chaka and Evert du Preez, who rescued passengers during a train tragedy in Kroonstad last year.

Grade 5 pupils will read about South African Paralympia­n Ntando Mahlangu, 17, a blade runner who won a silver medal in the 2016 Paralympic­s in Rio, Brazil, at the age of 14, and Kgothatso Montjane, a wheelchair­bound tennis player who competed in Wimbledon last year.

Grade 8 pupils are invited to tweet the sports minister about pay disparitie­s between sportsmen and women after they read about national team footballer Sanah Mollo’s complaints that she and her teammates receive less than their male counterpar­ts.

Mollo, who was part of the Banyana Banyana team at the 2016 Rio Olympics, wrote: “By the time I was nine, I was already serious about soccer and my parents were unhappy about my unladylike hobby.”

She said Banyana players needed to find other jobs to make ends meet.

The new grade 6 textbook refers to a Muslim girl who loves swimming. A new swimming teacher tells her she is wearing a veil so he knows she can’t swim.

Pupils are asked what the teacher had done wrong and how he had caused harm.

The department’s director-general, Mathanzima Mweli, said the new textbooks were a direct response to the findings of the ministeria­l team. “New writers [of all races] will help to create textbooks that reflect the diversity of the country,” he said.

Commenting on the books featuring local heroes and people who were making a difference, he said: “We want our textbooks to reflect the national and internatio­nal experience but to have a slant that reflects the experience of SA and the African continent.”

Lee-Anne Walker, director of Be True 2 Me, an organisati­on working with the department on LGBTIQ+ issues, said an important conversati­on to be had was the definition of a nuclear family in a nation where there were many single parents.

Walker said that the textbooks needed to be more relevant on “what are families”.

Hayley Walker, chair of Protective Behaviours Southern Africa, who declined to comment on the content of the textbooks, said they were long overdue because “too many life skills have been left to chance”.

“Teachers are nervous about dealing with the controvers­ial issues like gender identity, sexuality, consent and access to birth control,” she said. Some parents felt that when teachers spoke to their children about sexuality, “they were almost encouragin­g homosexual­ity or encouragin­g them to be transgende­r”, said Walker.

8 THE NUMBER of life orientatio­n textbooks scrutinise­d by a ministeria­l team

R150 THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT it will cost the department of basic education to print a new life orientatio­n textbook

 ??  ?? Marlene Wasserman
Marlene Wasserman
 ??  ?? Ntando Mahlangu
Ntando Mahlangu
 ??  ?? Sanah Mollo
Sanah Mollo
 ??  ?? Mokoni Chaka, left, and Evert du Preez
Mokoni Chaka, left, and Evert du Preez
 ??  ?? Kgothatso Montjane
Kgothatso Montjane

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