LGBT sex education

LGBT sex education refers to an educational program, most commonly found in schools, that addresses the sex education needs of LGBT individuals and covers topics related to homosexuality. It is usually integrated into the general sex education courses (alongside heterosexual topics). There is disagreement about whether LGBT sex education should be included in sex education curricula. Advocates of LGBT sex education say that the inclusion of LGBT issues into sex education programs would reduce homophobic bullying, improve the health of LGBT people, and decrease instances of problems common in LGBT students such as depression and low self-esteem; opponents argue that LGBT sex education programs would force a political point of view on students, misuse tax money, and disrespect religious values.

Gender symbols for homosexuality

Background

LGBT sex education is currently not covered in many schools.[1] Research has also posited that students often don’t find existing LGBT sex education programs to be effective. Teachers have differing views on the subject of homosexuality, and these personal opinions can impact LGBT sex education when it is implemented.[2]

Coverage of LGBT sex education

Multiple studies have concluded that LGBT sex education is often not encompassed in school sex education courses and that most students do not receive effective instruction in LGBT sex issues.[1][2][3] In a study conducted by Ellis and High in the UK (2004), 384 students were surveyed; they found that 24% had not received instruction in LGBT sex issues.[2] The CDC Division of Adolescent and School Health’s study revealed that 48% of schools in the US covered LGBT topics.[4] According to research reported by Burston and Hart in 2001, 45% of surveyed students believed that they did not cover LGBT sex education sufficiently in school. Research has also shown that there can be an implicit assumption that all students are heterosexual in sex education classes.[5] The LGBT students in Eleanor Formby’s 2011 study of sex education said that they do not always feel welcomed by sex education classes or at school.[1] Sex education courses commonly idealize marriage (not acknowledging that many countries outlaw same-sex marriage) thereby presenting a heterosexual view of sex and relationships as normal.[1] Studies have suggested that sex education programs often do not cover safe sex practices for LGBT individuals.[1][6]

However, there are some sex education curricula that do cover LGBT issues.[5] For example, the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations provides a sex education program called Our Whole Lives, which includes discussion of sexual orientation and presents homosexuality and heterosexuality as equally valid. Our Whole Lives offers programs designed for a range of developmental stages, from Kindergarten-level through adulthood, and follows the "Guidelines for Comprehensive Sexuality Education" that the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS) endorses.[7][8] The United Church of Christ also supports Our Whole Lives.[8]

Ineffective programs

Research has also illustrated that some sex education courses present LGBT issues in a negative light—portraying LGBT sex as something wrong, sick, or abnormal.[2] According to the American Civil Liberties Union, “Abstinence-only” approaches to sex education can also be alienating to LGBT students because these programs assume that marriage is a possibility for them all; however, same-sex marriage is illegal in many countries.[9] Ellis and High’s survey research in 2004 (including 384 students) revealed that 59% of young people who did receive LGBT sex education found it to be ineffective.[2]

Teachers

Teachers have been identified as a hindrance to LGBT sex education in some studies. Teachers frequently have their own opinions about homosexuality, and, according to these studies, if teachers have negative views toward LGBT individuals this can come through in their teaching—causing LGBT students to feel unaccepted.[2][5] According to Ellis and High (2004), this can result in LGBT students feeling worse than if homosexuality were left out of the curriculum.[2] Researchers have said that such teachers can be prejudiced and ignore instances of homophobic bullying directed at LGBT youth.[1] Burston and Hart (2001) reported that teachers sometimes believe that they should not take a side on the issue of homosexuality, and therefore should not interfere when homophobia occurs in the classroom.[5] According to Formby (2011), even phrasing that subtly casts homosexuality in a negative light can have a detrimental effect on LGBT students’ experience of sex education.[1]

There have also been issues around teachers feeling free to teach sex education that equally emphasizes both heterosexual and homosexual health information.[3][5] Deana Morrow’s study (1993) reported that some teachers said they were afraid they might be fired if they discussed LGBT issues.[3] Similarly, teachers can feel hindered because the school environment is inhospitable to homosexuality; in Burston and Hart’s 2001 study, some even said that they were under the impression that the school would not allow them to teach LGBT sex education.[5]

Classmates can also be unreceptive toward LGBT issues in current sex education courses, and students are often hesitant to talk about homosexuality, according to Buston and Hart (2001).[5]

The rainbow heart symbolizes LGB relationships

Proposed LGBT sex education programs

Advocates for LGBT sex education have suggested adjustments to current sex education practices in schools. One common place for improvement that researchers have identified is the angle from which sex education is approached in general. Buston and Hart (2001), Ellis and High (2004), and others have recommended that teachers frame sex education in terms of relationships rather than merely reproduction, which can lead to the exclusion of LGBT students.[2][5] Ellis and High mention that sexual orientation might be more appropriately taught as “an aspect of culture and identity” (Ellis and High 2004, pg. 11).[2] Other researchers such as Morrow (1993) believe that in order for sex education to be effective, it must present LGB as just as natural and legitimate as heterosexuality.[3] Advocates for LGBT sex education ask that LGBT sexual health issues be given equal weight in the curriculum accordingly.[5] They also say that more resources concerning LGBT sexual health issues need to be made available to students.[1] According to UCLA's Center for the Study of Women’s Policy Brief 11 (2012), LBGT students may not be willing to reach out for guidance themselves.[6]

Researchers have recommended that teachers in sex education programs avoid framing homosexuality as something that is fundamentally connected to sexually transmitted diseases and refrain from practices that are potentially detrimental to LGBT students, such as referring to partners as specifically “him” or “her” (better to use the more flexible “they”).[1][5] Gowen and Winges-Yanez (2014) suggest through their focus groups on LGBT teens that there are several problems with the way sex education is taught. The teens cited silencing, heterocentricity, and pathologizing of LGBT individuals as common practices. When asked how they would improve sex education, the group said inclusive sex education would include discussion of LGBT issues, learning how to access resources, STI prevention, relationships, and anatomy.[10] Advocates for LGBT rights also say that teachers need to abandon any reluctance to take a side in the debate about homosexuality.[2]

Argument against LGBT sex education

Opponents of LGBT sex education argue that it is wrong to teach students about the issue of homosexuality because it is too contentious. They say that parents should have control over what their children are exposed to and taught, and allowing public schools to cover LGBT sex education would undermine this right, forcing a particular political view on students. According to the Christian Post, some parents do not want their children to study homosexuality.[11] Critics have also said that citizens’ tax dollars shouldn’t go to programs that they might not agree with.[12]

According to Formby (2011), opponents have also argued that LGBT sex is harmful to students because they say it exposes them to damaging information.[1] They claim that the students should not learn about LGBT issues until they are older.[11] Some opponents of LGBT sex education have argued that including LGBT issues in sex education programs will encourage more young people to practice homosexuality as well.[3][13] LGBT sex education has also been seen as supporting something that is disrespectful to some families’ religious beliefs.[13] The Christian Post argued that if schools elect to teach about LGBT people and neglect religious topics, the curriculum would be unfairly balanced.[11]

There have also been concerns that LGBT sex education wouldn’t be effective because it is difficult for students to accept homosexuality, which may prevent them from being receptive to the instruction.[5]

Argument for LGBT sex education

Proponents of incorporating LGBT sex education into school curricula commonly present several arguments. According to the Huffington Post, some supporters claim that failing to include LGBT issues in sex education programs will overlook a significant number of students who identify as LGBT;[14] the Center for American Progress (CAP) says that this can cause them to feel marginalized and removed from the lesson because it doesn’t pertain to them.[15] LGBT sex education advocates also argue that leaving LGBT safe sex instruction out of the curriculum will increase the likelihood of health problems for LGBT students.[6][15] Supporters say that since LGBT people are particularly at risk for HIV/AIDS, it is especially important to provide them with sexual health information.[16] According to researcher Eleanor Formby (2011), lesbian women are a high-risk group for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), because many do not know that they can be susceptible to STDs or how to engage in safe sex. Therefore, it is important that they receive lesbian sex education.[1] LGBT sex education advocates suggest that because LGBT students aren’t taught sex education that pertains to them in school, they feel unprepared for sex, unable to talk about it openly, and have to learn about it by themselves—which can result in negative health outcomes.[1][15] Sanchez (2012) argues that LGBT students are unlikely to reach out to resources that could give them good information on their own, which furthers the need for LGBT sex education in schools.[6]

Parade attendees wave rainbow flags at the 2012 Washington, D.C. Capital Pride parade

LGBT sex education supporters have also argued that the inclusion of LGBT topics in the curriculum can decrease instances of bullying in schools by familiarizing students with the range of sexual orientations and reducing harmful stereotypes.[3][14][15] The Center for American Progress argues that LGBT sex education results in a decrease in homophobic comments. According to the Huffington Post, supporters say that educating young people about LGBT individuals could help them have a more positive attitude toward their gay peers.[14] The Center for American Progress (2013) says that LGBT sex education would therefore reduce common problems LGBT students face as a result of negative attitudes; these include mental health issues like depression, the risk of suicide, drug abuse, self-esteem issues, and poorer academic performance due to stress caused by discrimination. They argue that covering homosexuality in sex education programs helps students feel more secure at school.[15]

Finally, proponents of LGBT sex education have said that curricula that explore all facets of sexuality would be beneficial to straight students as well, because they claim that it presents a more accurate picture of the world and human sexuality. They also argue that it can be of assistance to any questioning students that might be in the class.[14]

According to the Center for American Progress (2013), the majority of parents support including homosexuality in the sex education curriculum; they report that 73% of high school parents think LGBT issues should be taught. The CAP claims that this high percentage of support indicates that LGBT topics should be incorporated.[15]

Laws and legal battles

Section 28

Main article: Section 28

Section 28 was a controversial law in the United Kingdom that barred schools from presenting homosexuality as a viable sexual orientation or basis for relationships (though the law was never used in court).[12][17] It was enacted in 1988 and repealed throughout the UK by 2003.[18] Critics of Section 28 say that the law prevented teachers from intervening in instances of homophobic bullying and greatly hindered the development of gay rights in Great Britain.[17] According to Moran (2001), proponents of the law argued that it protected students from being harmed by gay propaganda.[12] Recently, LGBT advocates have raised concerns that policies similar to Section 28 are appearing again in British schools.[19]

Croatian textbook

In 2009, the European Committee of Social Rights found several statements in a Croatian mandatory Biology course textbook, including: “Many individuals are prone to sexual relations with persons of the same sex…. It is believed that parents are to blame because they impede their children’s correct sexual development with their irregularities in family relations. Nowadays it has become evident that homosexual relations are the main culprit for increased spreading of sexually transmitted diseases (e.g. AIDS),” and “The disease [AIDS] has spread amongst promiscuous groups of people who often change their sexual partners. Such people are homosexuals because of sexual contacts with numerous partners, drug addicts...and prostitutes.” The European Committee of Social Rights deemed these statements discriminatory and in violation of Croatia's obligations under the European Social Charter.[20]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Formby, Eleanor (August 2011). "Sex and relationships education, sexual health, and lesbian, gay and bisexual sexual cultures: views from young people". Sex Education. 11 (3): 255–266. doi:10.1080/14681811.2011.590078.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Ellis, Viv; High (April 2004). "Something More to Tell You: Lesbian, Gay, or Bisexual Young Peoples". Journal of Adolescence. 30 (2): 213–225. doi:10.1080/0141192042000195281.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Morrow, Deana (November 1993). "Social Work with Gay and Lesbian Adolescents". Social Work. 38 (6): 655–660. Check date values in: |access-date= (help);
  4. "Questions and Answers: LGBTQ Youth Issues". SEICUS. SEICUS. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Buston, Katie; Hart (February 2001). "Heterosexism and homophobia in Scottish school sex education: exploring the nature of the problem". Journal of Adolescence. 4 (1): 95–109.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Sanchez, Marisol. "Providing inclusive sex education in schools will address the health needs of LGBT Youth" (PDF). Center for the Study of Women UCLA. Retrieved October 17, 2013.
  7. "Our Whole Lives Lifespan Sexuality Education Curricula". Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  8. 1 2 "Our Whole Lives". The United Church of Christ. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
  9. American Civil Liberties Union. "Helping Teens Make Healthy and Responsible Decisions About Sex". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved October 17, 2013.
  10. Gowen; Winges-Yanez (2014). "Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning youths' perspectives of inclusive school-based sexuality education". Journal of Sex Research. 51 (7): 788–800. doi:10.1080/00224499.2013.806648. PMID 24003908.
  11. 1 2 3 Villalva, Brittney. "Sex Education in Schools Should Include a Gay Agenda, Report Claims". The Christian Post. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  12. 1 2 3 Moran, Joe (1 February 2001). "Childhood Sexualities and Education: The Case of Section 28". Sexualities. 4 (1): 73–89. doi:10.1177/136346001004001004.
  13. 1 2 Janofsky, Michael. "Gay Rights Battlefields Spread to Public Schools". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  14. 1 2 3 4 Goodman, Josh. "5 Reasons Schools Should Adopt LGBTQ-inclusive Sex Ed". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Slater, Hannah. "LGBT-Inclusive Sex Education Means Healthier Youth and Safer Schools". Center for American Progress. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  16. Roberts, Scott. "National AIDS Trust welcomes Labour's call for LGBT inclusive sex education". Pink News. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
  17. 1 2 Browne, Daniel (2013-11-14). "The Lasting Legacy of Section 28". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  18. "Section 28 Timeline". The Guardian. 2011. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  19. Morris, Nigel (2013-08-20). "The return of Section 28: Schools and academies practising homophobic policy that was outlawed under Tony Blair". The Independent. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  20. ECSR decision on the merits in case no. 45/2007 — para. 60
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