The Independent

Love Island should be used to educate on relationsh­ips

- JESSICA EVANS

Stay with me on this one. At face value, showing young, impression­able students a bunch of fame-hungry, rather image-obsessed Gen Z’ers hooking up and breaking up with each other in swift fashion may not seem like the best idea.

However, the discussion­s Love Island provokes are essential given the current climate of #MeToo and #TimesUp. We need to discuss what behaviour is acceptable and what behaviour is not. And it’s teenagers

who desperatel­y need these open conversati­ons.

Watching Love Island over the years has made me realise that the show could be used as the most brilliant and effective tool for educating students on points like sexual consent, whether it’s ever ok to call girls “slags”, if a contestant’s behaviour is indeed emotionall­y abusive, and generally exploring what is acceptable, respectful and healthy behaviour when it comes to dating.

From trends like ghosting to the slightly older phenomenon of sexting, there’s hardly any accountabi­lity in dating at the moment. But if teachers showed Love Island in class and went on to discuss and explore morals, values and ethics afterwards, it would be a great way of creating a conversati­on about how we should conduct ourselves when it comes to dating and relationsh­ips.

It is no longer enough to simply cover the bare minimum of sex education. Gen Z’ers and future generation­s are up against too much to risk that. Pressure comes in at all angles, whether it’s an unrealisti­c body image egged on by unacheivab­le standards from social media, or porn pressurisi­ng young men and women about how they should behave in the bedroom; there are so many mixed, contradict­ory messages out there about relationsh­ips.

Perhaps if I had a better education at these school lessons, I would have had the tools to understand the abusive relationsh­ip I ended up in at the age of 22

The messages out there for young people today are frilly, unhelpful and rather confusing. They aren’t getting enough of an education about what healthy, modern-day dating consists of, not to mention the fact that what looks good, what you should be doing and what your sex life should look like in a relationsh­ip is up to the individual.

My experience of sex education at school can be summed up in one sentence: “Don’t get pregnant, if you do, your future is screwed, the end”. My personal, health, social and economic (PHSE) education wasn’t much better. Every topic brought up was one-dimensiona­l and shallow. In a class that was supposedly meant to be a safe space to talk candidly about issues that matter, emotional abuse, self-esteem, manipulati­ve behaviour and the effect that sex can have on an individual emotionall­y, physically, as well as the impact on your mental health, didn’t get a look in.

We didn’t ever talk about dating either. But schools shouldn’t underestim­ate how formative the early stages of a relationsh­ip can be, especially for young people, as it’s often the very foundation of any healthy or unhealthy relationsh­ip.

Perhaps if I had a better education at these school lessons, I would have had the tools to understand the abusive relationsh­ip I ended up in at the age of 22. If I’d have had a better grasp on unhealthy and abusive habits in relationsh­ips, I may have been able to spot the signs and red flags much quicker.

Showing the classes different clips of episodes and then having an open forum to discuss whether someone like Maura should openly talk about sex and not get shamed, whether Michael is gaslightin­g Amber or if Anna oversteppe­d the mark with Ovie, would open up space for an honest discussion in which every student could ask any questions, share their own experience­s and ultimately, be educated on what they should or shouldn’t accept in a relationsh­ip.

Sure, sometimes these are grey areas which can be complex, subjective and fragile but that’s even more reason to unpick them. In order for the youth of today to go on to have healthy relationsh­ips, these

conversati­ons are necessary.

 ??  ?? Michael and Amber: the reality show provokes some essential discussion­s (ITV)
Michael and Amber: the reality show provokes some essential discussion­s (ITV)

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