Miriam Cates (Penistone and Stocksbridge) (Con) I beg to move, That
this House has considered relationship and sex education materials
in schools. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Thurrock (Jackie
Doyle-Price) and the hon. Member for Canterbury (Rosie Duffield)
who have co-sponsored this debate, and the Backbench Business
Committee, which has been so generous with the time allowed—we will
try not to take it all up. Let me start with a health warning:
my...Request free trial
(Penistone and Stocksbridge)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered relationship and sex education
materials in schools.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Thurrock () and the hon. Member for
Canterbury () who have co-sponsored this
debate, and the Backbench Business Committee, which has been so
generous with the time allowed—we will try not to take it all
up.
Let me start with a health warning: my speech is not suitable for
children. That is sadly ironic, given that all of the extreme and
inappropriate material I am about to share has already been
shared with children in our schools. As a former biology teacher,
I have delivered my fair share of sex education. Teaching the
facts of life often comes with more than a little embarrassment
for teachers and pupils alike. I remember teaching about
reproduction when I was about 30 weeks pregnant with my first
baby. One child asked me if my husband knew I was pregnant.
Another, having watched a video on labour and birth, commented,
“Miss, that’s really gonna hurt, you know.”
Just as children do not know about photosynthesis or the
digestive system without being taught, neither do they know the
facts of reproduction. Thus, it is important that children are
taught clearly and truthfully about sex. Of course, there is a
lot more to sexual relationships than just anatomy. Many people
believe that parents should take the leading role in teaching
children about relationships, since one of the main duties of
parenting is to pass on wisdom and values to children.
Nevertheless, in some families parents cannot or do not teach
children about relationships, and it is also sadly the case that
the internet now presents children with a vast array of false and
damaging information about sex.
There is widespread consensus that schools do have a role to play
in relationships and sex education. That is why the Government
chose to make the teaching of relationships and sex education
compulsory in all secondary schools from September 2020.
According to the guidance, the aim was to help children
“manage their academic, personal and social lives in a positive
way.”
Less than two years later, my right hon. Friend the Education
Secretary has written to the Children’s Commissioner asking her
for help in supporting schools to teach RSE because we know that
the quality of RSE is inconsistent.
The Education Secretary is right that the teaching of sex
education is inconsistent. Unlike maths, science or history,
there are no widely adopted schemes of work or examinations, so
the subject matter and materials vary widely between schools.
However, inconsistency should be the least of the Education
Secretary’s concerns when we look at the reality of what is being
taught. Despite its good intentions, the new RSE framework has
opened the floodgates to a whole host of external providers who
offer sex education materials to schools. Now, children across
the country are being exposed to a plethora of deeply
inappropriate, wildly inaccurate, sexually explicit and damaging
materials in the name of sex education. That is extremely
concerning for a number of reasons.
First, if we fail to teach children clearly and factually about
relationships, sex and the law they will be exposed to all sorts
of risks. For example, if sex is defined as, “anything that makes
you horny or aroused”—the definition offered by the sex education
provider, School of Sexuality Education—how does a child
understand the link between sex and pregnancy? Sex Education
Forum tells children they fall into one of two groups:
menstruators or non-menstruators. If a teenage girl’s periods do
not start, what will she think? How does she know that is not
normal? How does she know to consult a doctor? How will she know
she is not pregnant? Will she just assume she is one of the
non-menstruators?
The book for teachers, “Great Relationships and Sex Education”,
suggests an activity for 15-year-olds in which children are given
prompt cards and have to say whether they think certain types of
sexual acts are good or bad. How do the children know what acts
come with health risks, or the risk of pregnancy or sexually
transmitted infections? If we tell children that, “love has no
age”—the slogan used in a Diversity Role Models resource—do we
undermine their understanding of the legal age of consent? Sex
education provider Bish Training informs children that:
“Most people would say that they had a penis and testicles or a
clitoris and vagina, however many people are in the middle of
this spectrum with how their bodies are configured.”
As a former biology teacher, I do not even know where to start
with that one.
As adults, we often fail to remember what it is like to be a
child and we make the mistake of assuming that children know more
than they do. Children have all sorts of misconceptions. That is
why it is our responsibility to teach them factually, truthfully
and in age-appropriate ways, so that they can make informed
decisions.
Another concern relates to the teaching of consent. Of course it
is vital to teach about consent. The Everyone’s Invited
revelations make that abundantly clear. But we must remember
that, under the law, children cannot consent to sex. Sex
education classes conducted by the group It Happens Education
told boys of 13 and 14 that the law
“is not there to…punish young people for having consensual
sex”
and said:
“It’s just two 14 year olds who want to have sex with each other
who are consensually having sex.”
It is not hard to see the risks of this approach, which
normalises and legitimises under-age sex. Not only are children
legally not able to consent; they also do not have the
developmental maturity or capacity to consent to sexual
activity—that is the point of the age of consent.
The introduction of graphic or extreme sexual material in sex
education lessons also reinforces the porn culture that is
damaging our children in such a devastating way. Of course it is
not the fault of schools that half of all 14-year-olds have seen
pornography online—much of it violent and degrading—but some RSE
lessons are actively contributing to the sexualisation and
adultification of children. The Proud Trust has produced a dice
game encouraging children to discuss explicit sexual acts, based
on the roll of a dice. The six sides of the dice name different
body parts—such as anus, vulva, penis and mouth—and objects. Two
dice are thrown and children must name a pleasurable sexual act
that can take place between the two body parts. The game is aimed
at children of 13 and over.
Sexwise is a website run and funded by the Department of Health
and Social Care and recommended in the Department for Education’s
RSE guidance. The website is promoted in schools and contains the
following advice:
“Maybe you read a really hot bit of erotica while looking up
Dominance and Submission…Remember, sharing is caring”.
Sex education materials produced by Bish Training involve
discussion of a wide range of sexual practices—some of them
violent. This includes rough sex, spanking, choking, BDSM and
kink. Bish is aimed at young people of 14 and over and provides
training materials for teachers.
Even when materials are not extreme, we must still be careful not
to sexualise children prematurely. I spoke to a mother who told
me how her 11-year-old son had been shown a PowerPoint
presentation in a lesson on sexuality. It was setting out
characteristics and behaviours and asking children to read
through the lists and decide whether they were straight, gay or
bisexual. Pre-pubescent 11-year-olds are not straight, gay or
bisexual—they are children.
Even School Diversity Week, a celebration of LGBTQIA+ promoted by
the Just Like Us group, leads to the sexualisation of children.
Of course schools should celebrate diversity and promote
tolerance, but why are we doing that by asking pre-sexual
children to align themselves with adult sexual liberation
campaigns? Let us not forget that the + includes kink, BDSM and
fetish.
(Thurrock) (Con)
My hon. Friend is giving a very illuminating speech. The material
that she is talking about talks about the detailed practice of
sexual acts. She is a former biology teacher herself. Are there
not proper boundaries that teachers have to respect in teaching
sex education, so that it does not get into talk about behaviours
that really strays into a relationship that teachers and children
should not have?
I thank my hon. Friend for her intervention. There is guidance,
which I will come on to, but the problem is that the guidance is
often very vague and open to interpretation. I will absolutely
come on to that in my remarks.
Even primary schools are not immune from using inappropriate
materials. An “All About Me” programme developed by Warwickshire
County Council’s Respect Yourself team introduces six and
seven-year-olds to “rules about touching yourself”. I recently
spoke to a mother in my constituency who was distraught that her
six-year-old had been taught in school about masturbation.
Sexualising children and encouraging them to talk about intimate
details with adults breaks down important boundaries and makes
them more susceptible and available to sexual predators, both on
and offline.
Another significant concern is the use of RSE to push extreme
gender ideology. Gender ideology is a belief system that claims
that we all have an innate gender, which may or may not align
with our biological sex. Gender ideology claims that, rather than
sex being determined at conception and observed at birth, it is
assigned at birth, and that doctors sometimes get it wrong.
Gender theory sadly has sexist and homophobic undertones, pushing
outdated gender stereotypes and suggesting to same-sex-attracted
adolescents that, instead of being gay or lesbian, they may in
fact be the opposite sex. Gender theory says that if someone
feels like a woman, they are a woman, regardless of their
chromosomes, their genitals, or, in fact, reality.
Gender ideology is highly contested. It does not have a basis in
science, and no one had heard of it in this country just 10 years
ago. Yet, it is being pushed on children in some schools under
the guise of RSE, with what can only be described as a religious
fervour. Department for Education guidance states that schools
should
“not reinforce harmful stereotypes, for instance by suggesting
that children might be a different gender”,
and that:
“Resources used in teaching about this topic must…be…evidence
based.”
Yet a video produced by AMAZE and used in schools suggests that
boys who wear nail varnish or girls who like weight lifting might
actually be the opposite sex. Resources by Brook claim:
“‘man’ and ‘woman’ are genders. They are social ideas about how
people who have vulvas and vaginas, and people who have penises
and testicles should behave”.
Split Banana offers workshops to schools where children learn
ideas of how gender is socially constructed and explore links
between the gender binary and colonialism. A Gendered
Intelligence workshop tells children that:
“A woman is still a woman, even if she enjoys getting blow
jobs.”
Just Like Us tells children that their biological sex can be
changed. PSHE Association resources inform children that people
whose gender matches the sex they were assigned at birth are
described as cisgender.
Gender theory is even being taught to our very youngest children.
Pop’n’Olly tells children that gender is male, female, both or
neither. The Introducing Teddy book, aimed at primary school
children, tells the story of Teddy, who changes sex, illustrated
by the transformation of his bow tie into a hair bow. The
Diversity Role Models primary training workshop uses the “Gender
Unicorn”, a cartoon unicorn who explains that there is an
additional biological sex category called “other”.
Numerous resources from numerous sex education providers present
gender theory as fact, contrary to DFE guidance. However, it is
not just factually incorrect resources that are making their ways
into schools; visitors from external agencies are invited in to
talk to children about sex and relationships, sometimes even
without a teacher present in the room.
Guidance says that, when using external agencies, schools should
check their material in advance and
“conduct a basic online search”.
However, a social media search of organisations such as Diversity
Role Models reveals links to drag queens with highly sexualised,
porn-inspired names, or in the case of Mermaids, the promotion of
political activism, which breaches political impartiality
guidelines.
In some cases, children are disadvantaged when they show signs of
dissent from gender ideology, as we saw in the recent case,
reported in the press, of a girl who was bullied out of school
for questioning gender theory. I have spoken to parents of
children who have been threatened with detention if they
misgender a trans-identifying child or complain about a child of
the opposite sex in their changing rooms. I have heard from
parents whose child’s RSE homework was marked down for not
adhering to this new creed.
Children believe what adults tell them. They are biologically
programmed to do so; how else does a child learn the knowledge
and skills they need to grow, develop and be prepared for adult
life? It is therefore the duty of those responsible for raising
children—particularly parents and teachers—to tell them the
truth. Those who teach a child that there are 64 different
genders, that they may actually be a different gender to their
birth sex, or that they may have been born in the wrong body, are
not telling the truth. It is a tragedy that the RSE curriculum,
which should help children to develop confidence and
self-respect, is instead being used to undermine reality and
ultimately put children in danger.
Some may ask what harm is being done by presenting those ideas to
children, and, of course, it is right to teach children to be
tolerant, kind and accepting of others. However, it is not
compassionate, wise, or legal to teach children that contested
ideologies are facts. That is indoctrination, and it is becoming
evident that that has some concerning consequences.
(Chingford and Woodford
Green) (Con)
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for giving way, and for the
progress she is making on this. I was intrigued, but another
question is that in contested areas like this, it actually leads
further than that. It is not just a sense of indoctrination;
there are also physical consequences, because children will end
up going through medical processes that lead them to almost
irreversible problems later on, should it turn out to be
something that is a problem for them. Does the hon. Lady think
that is also a potential consequence of what has been going
on?
My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. The problem is that
these ideas do not just stay as ideas; they have serious physical
consequences. There has been a more than 4,000% rise in the
referrals of girls to gender services over the last decade, and a
recent poll of teachers suggests that at least 79% of schools now
have trans-identifying children. That is not a biological
phenomenon. It is social contagion, driven by the internet and
reinforced in schools.
The Bayswater Support Group, which provides advice and support
for parents of trans-identifying children, reports a surge of
parents contacting them after their children are exposed to
gender content in RSE lessons and in assemblies. A large
proportion of parents say their child showed no sign of gender
distress until either a school assembly or RSE lessons on those
topics. Children who are autistic, who are same-sex attracted,
who do not conform to traditional gender stereotypes, or who have
mental health conditions are disproportionately likely to
identify as trans or non-binary.
(East Worthing and Shoreham) (Con)
I have heard evidence from the Bayswater Support Group as well.
Parents who had questioned children who came home from school
after the school had supported their wanting to transition were
contacted by social services because that could be construed in
some way as harm towards the child, which is frightening given
that they still have parental responsibility.
My hon. Friend mentioned physical aspects. Is there not also a
mental health aspect? Teenagers and young children have so much
to cope with these days—much more so than when we were going
through puberty and growing up. They have all the pressures of
social media. Almost to be forced to question their sex—if they
do not, there is something wrong with them—puts extraordinary
pressures on children, adding to all that they have to go through
as teenagers already.
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. It does nothing but add to
the anxiety and difficulty that many teenagers already face. That
is why it is more important than ever that parents and schools
tell children the truth about sex and relationships and
gender.
When we think about the vulnerability of children with autism or
same-sex attracted children to some of these ideas, we can look
at resources from the Chameleon sex education group, which tells
Tom’s testimony. Tom, a female, says:
“I guess I always felt different. Even on my first day of school
I remember not feeling like other kids...I didn’t realise at the
time it was because of my gender identity.”
When autistic and vulnerable children who are already struggling
to fit in and feel accepted are presented with an explanation for
their difficulties, it is not surprising that they are attracted
to it.
Katie Alcock, senior lecturer in developmental psychology at the
University of Lancaster, told me that children with autism right
through the primary and secondary years struggle with the idea
that other people think differently to them, and that something
can have an underlying essence that is different to its reality.
So teaching autistic children that their feelings of awkwardness
might stem from being born in the wrong body is a failure of
safeguarding.
In fact, children who tell a teacher at school that they are
suffering from gender distress are then often excluded from
normal safeguarding procedures. Instead of involving parents and
considering wider causes for what the child is feeling and the
best course of action, some schools actively hide the information
from parents, secretly changing a child’s name and pronouns in
school, but using birth names and pronouns in communications with
parents.
One parent of a 15-year-old with a diagnosis of Asperger’s
syndrome said she discovered that without her knowledge, her
daughter’s school had started the process of socially
transitioning her child, and has continued to do so despite the
mother’s objections. Another mother said:
“It’s all happened very quickly and very unexpectedly after
teaching at school during year seven and eight. As far as I can
understand the children were encouraged to question the
boundaries of their sexual identity as well as their gender
identity. Her friendship group of eight girls all adopted some
form of LGBTQ identity—either sexual identity or gender identity.
My daughter’s mental health has deteriorated so quickly, to the
point of self harm and some of the blame is put on me for not
being encouraging enough of my daughter’s desire to flatten her
breasts and for puberty blockers.”
As my hon. Friend the Member for East Worthing and Shoreham
() said, some parents have been referred to social
services when they have questioned the wisdom of treating their
son as a girl or their daughter as a boy.
Socially transitioning a child—changing their name and pronouns,
and treating them in public as a member of the opposite sex—is
not a neutral act. In her interim report on gender services for
children, paediatrician Dr Hilary Cass remarks that although
social transition
“may not be thought of as an intervention or treatment,”
it is
“an active intervention because it may have significant effects
on a child or young person’s psychological functioning.”
The majority of adolescents who suffer from gender dysphoria grow
out of it, but instead of safeguarding vulnerable children,
schools are actively leading children down a path of transition.
If a child presented with anorexia and a teacher’s response was
to hide that from parents, celebrate the body dysmorphia and
encourage the child to stop eating, that would be a gross
safeguarding failure. For a non-medical professional to make a
diagnosis of gender dysphoria, exclude the child’s parents and
encourage the child to transition is just such a failure.
In some schools, children are not only taught about the concept
of gender theory but signposted to information about physical
interventions. Last year, sixth-formers at a grammar school sent
a newsletter to girls as young as 11, detailing how to bind their
breasts to “look more masculine” and outlining how surgery can
remove tissue if it hurts too much. Also, schools have played a
major role in referrals to gender identity clinics, where
children are sometimes set on a path to medical and surgical
transition.
I was really pleased to see the Health Secretary announce today
that he is commissioning a more robust study of whether treatment
at such clinics improves children’s lives or leads to later
problems or regret, because schools may think that they are being
kind, but the consequences of full transition—permanent
infertility, loss of sexual function and lifelong health
problems—are devastating, as has become clear following the case
of Keira Bell.
Anyone hearing for the first time what is going on in schools
might reasonably ask, “How can this be allowed?” The answer is
that it is not allowed. DFE guidance tells schools:
“Resources used in teaching about this topic must always be
age-appropriate and evidence-based. Materials which suggest that
non-conformity to gender stereotypes should be seen as synonymous
with having a different gender identity should not be used and
you should not work with external agencies or organisations that
produce such material.”
However, many teachers just do not have the time to look into the
background of every group that provides sex education resources,
and when faced with teaching such difficult and sensitive topics,
they understandably reach for ready-made materials, without
investigating their source.
Furthermore, those teachers who are aware of the harms are
sometimes afraid to share their concerns. A lot of teachers have
written to me about this situation, with one writing:
“I left my job in a Primary School after we were asked to be
complicit in the ‘social transitioning’ of a 7 year old boy. This
was after Gendered Intelligence came into the school and
delivered training.”
Relationship and sex education in this country has become a wild
west. Anyone can set themselves up as a sex education provider
and offer resources and advice to schools. Imagine if someone
with no qualifications could set themselves up as a geography
resource provider, insert their own political beliefs on to a map
of the world—perhaps they would put Ukraine inside the Russian
border—and then sell those materials for use in schools. I do not
believe that some of these sex education groups should have any
place in our educational system.
Indeed, the guidance says that schools should exercise extreme
caution when working with external agencies:
“Schools should not under any circumstances work with external
agencies that take or promote extreme political positions or use
materials produced by such agencies.”
Yet all the organisations that I have mentioned today, and many
others, fall foul of the guidance. What is more, the Government
are actually funding some of these organisations with taxpayers’
money. For example, The Proud Trust received money from the
tampon tax, and EqualiTeach and Diversity Role Models have
received money from the DFE as part of anti-bullying schemes. We
have created the perfect conditions for a safeguarding disaster,
whereby anyone can set up as an RSE provider and be given access
to children, either through lesson materials or through direct
access to classrooms.
Yet parents—those who love a child most and who are most invested
in their welfare—are being cut out. In many cases, parents are
refused access to the teaching materials being used by their
children in school. This was highlighted by the case of Clare
Page, which was reported at the weekend. She complained about sex
education lessons that were being taught in her child’s school by
an organisation called the School of Sexuality Education. Until
this year, that organisation’s website linked to a commercial
website that promoted pornography. Mrs Page’s daughter’s school
refused to allow the family to have a copy of the material
provided in lessons, saying it was commercially sensitive.
Schools are in loco parentis. Their authority to teach children
comes not from the state and not from the teaching unions, but
from parents. Parents should have full access to the RSE
materials being used by their children. We have created this
safeguarding disaster and we will have to find the courage to
deal with it for the sake of our children.
My hon. Friend is making a compelling argument. She must have
talked to the Department for Education about the matter before
the debate. What I find difficult is everything else—she talked
about geography and biology—is heavily inspected, and a school
that departs from clear facts and teaches something different
would immediately get a bad report and probably be put in special
measures, yet when it comes to this subject, there seems to be no
controls. Is that the case or is it just that the Department
thinks this is something that only schools can judge?
I hope that the Minister will answer those questions, but my
right hon. Friend is right. That is the source of the problem:
the regulation and inspection criteria is not the same for these
subjects, but it is even more of a problem for them because they
are contested. As a science teacher, if I were to google a video
of sodium being put in water, I will not find anything that
anyone disagrees with or that departs from the truth. The trouble
with some of these topics is there is such a wide range of
contested views that we need a set of regulations and an accepted
curriculum even more so, but I will come on to that.
The Health Secretary rightly compared the fear of causing
offence, which may happen, with fears of being called racist when
discussing the Rotherham grooming gangs. Exposing children to
extreme sexual practices and ideology, telling them it is all
about choice, connecting them with adults they do not know,
cutting out parents, labelling parents as harmful or even
referring them to social services, hiding information about a
child from those who love them most—there are strong parallels
here with grooming practices, and I have no doubt that children
will be more susceptible to being groomed as a result of the
materials they are being exposed to.
How have we gone so wrong? We seem to have abandoned childhood.
Just as in the covid pandemic when we sacrificed young for old,
our approach to sex education is sacrificing the welfare and
innocence of children in the interests of adults’ sexual
liberation. In 2022, our children are physically overprotected.
They have too little opportunity to play unsupervised, to take
responsibility and to mature and grow wise, yet at the same time
they are being exposed to adult ideologies, being used as pawns
in adults’ political agendas and at risk of permanent harm. What
kind of society have we created where teachers need to undertake
a risk assessment to take pupils to a local park, but a drag
queen wearing a dildo is invited into a library to teach
pre-school children?
Parents do not know where to turn, and many I have spoken to tell
me how they complain to schools and get nowhere. Even the
response from the DFE comes back the same every time telling
parents that, “Where an individual has concerns, the quickest and
most effective route to take is to raise the issue directly with
the school.” The complaints system is circular and schools are
left to mark their own homework.
Ofsted does not seem willing or able to uphold the DFE’s
guidance. Indeed, it may be contributing to the problem. It was
reported last week that Ofsted cites lack of gender identity
teaching in primary schools as a factor in whether schools are
downgraded. There is a statutory duty on the Department to review
the RSE curriculum every three years, so the first review is due
next year. I urge the Minister to bring forward that review and
conduct it urgently. I understand that the Department is in the
process of producing guidance for schools on sex and gender, so
will Minister tell us when that will be available?
While much of the RSE guidance is sensible, terms such as “age
appropriate” are too woolly and difficult to interpret. The
guidance produced on political neutrality has been helpful, but
this is not fundamentally a political issue. It is a matter of
taking an evidence-based approach to what knowledge and ideas a
child is able to process at different stages of their
development. We do not try to teach babies to read or teach
quantum mechanics to six-year-olds, because they are not
developmentally ready, and neither should we teach about sexual
pleasure or gender fluidity to pre-pubescent children or about
extreme sex acts to adolescents. The RSE guidance and framework
must be rewritten with oversight by experts in child development
and put on a statutory footing to determine what should be
taught, when and by whom. The DFE should consider creating a set
of accredited resources, with regulatory oversight by Ofqual, and
mandating that RSE be taught only by subject specialists. The
Department has previously said in correspondence that it is
“investing in a central package to help all schools to increase
the confidence and quality of their teaching practice in these
subjects, including guidance and training resources to provide
comprehensive teaching in these areas in an age-appropriate
way.”
Can the Minister say when that package will be ready?
In the light of the Cass review interim report, the Department
must write to schools with clear guidance about socially
transitioning children, the law on single-sex facilities and the
imperative to include parents in issues of safeguarding. The
Department should also conduct a deep dive into the materials
being used in schools, the groups that provide such materials and
their funding sources.
(Don Valley) (Con)
My hon. Friend is making a fantastic speech. There is an awful
lot of work that needs doing on this subject. There is an old
saying: “Give me a child until he is seven and I will show you
the man.” While the Department is working on this issue, children
are unfortunately being exposed to this material. The damage
could be being done as we speak. We could do with action to
withdraw some of this material with immediate effect while we do
those deep dive studies. I think it is so important. It is
happening now—as we sit here, children are being exposed to
things in their school that they should not be. We need to do
something immediately.
I completely agree. That is why I am calling on the Department to
conduct this review urgently. It is incumbent on parents and
teachers to speak out when they see those resources and express
their concerns. Unfortunately, at the moment, many teachers and
parents are powerless, which is why we very much need the help of
the Department.
What is the Minister’s view on the amendment to the Schools Bill
introduced in the House of Lords that would require schools to
allow parents to view the materials being used in RSE? Another
solution might be for the DFE to create a statutory obligation
that schools can only use resources published online. That would
put the onus on third-party providers to produce responsible,
high-quality material and make it available for public and
academic scrutiny. Does the Minister not agree that sunlight is
the best disinfectant, and that parents have the right to know
what their children are being taught, especially in matters of
sex and relationships?
RSE in schools is not fit for purpose. I have no doubt that there
are many schools and many teachers doing an excellent job of
delivering RSE in a way that helps to prepare children for adult
life, as was intended. However, from the sheer volume of evidence
I have seen—I have spoken for 32 minutes, but I honestly could
speak for two hours with the materials I have been given;
however, I will allow other hon. Members to come in shortly—and
the number of parents who have contacted me from all over the
country and from all different types of schools, it seems clear
that RSE is exposing far too many children to adult sexuality and
adult ideology and is doing them harm.
Most teachers and headteachers mean well, but they are
overwhelmed by political pressure, too busy to investigate the
source of teaching materials and too confused by guidance that is
at times weak and contradictory. At the moment, it is left to
dedicated parents groups such as the Bayswater Support Group,
Transgender Trend, the Safe Schools Alliance, Parents for
Education and the Family Education Trust to support parents,
guide them to complaints procedures and help them to engage with
schools. However, it is the Department for Education that imposed
the mandatory requirement for schools to deliver RSE, so it is
fundamentally the responsibility of the Department to ensure that
schools are equipped and held accountable to deliver it well.
I look forward to hearing from the Minister how the Department
plans to clean up this mess and give our children the protection
they deserve.
Several hon. Members rose—
(in the Chair)
Order. Before I call , I want to indicate
that I will call the Opposition spokesperson at 4.08 pm; he and
the Minister will have 10 minutes each. There will be a couple of
minutes for to respond at the end.
Informally, that is about six minutes a speech. However, if we
have too many interventions or the interventions are too long, we
will have to cut that back.
3.34pm
(Brighton, Kemptown)
(Lab/Co-op)
I want to start with some things that I agreed with in what I
have just heard. I agree that education materials in our schools
should be made public. I agree with that for all subjects,
actually, and not just in schools. I think of the scandal in
universities, where academic journals are behind paywalls, so we
cannot look to see what academics on public money are researching
in this country without paying huge amounts. I totally agree on
that point.
I totally agree we needed better guidance from the Government on
the issue. In fact, when we introduced RSE or RSHE, one of the
big problems was that the Government guidelines were late and
delayed, and some of the problems we saw in places such as
Birmingham, where parents were protesting outside schools, were
because the guidelines were not clear enough, often putting too
much on teachers having to negotiate with parents, rather than
the Department protecting teachers by saying “These are exactly
the things that should be covered.”
I totally agree that we need to have an education facilitated in
schools with subject specialists. It is an ongoing scandal that
we have biology teachers teaching this wide area when, as the
hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge () has said, this is so much
more than the metaphorical condom on the banana that students
have in the last year of secondary school. It is about the
relationship, the emotional aspect and mental health, so I
totally agree.
Actually, the inclusion of this in a wider citizenship and RSHE
portfolio, by which we developed an education pathway for trainee
teachers during the last Labour Government, was important. The
destruction of citizenship education over the last 10 years and,
therefore, the training of teachers specialised in such areas has
been a great failure. I know there has been some reversal of
that, but I am afraid that that is the situation we are in now.
We have fewer subject specialists in citizenship and RSHE because
of the choices made in 2010. I agree on the principle that we
need to reverse that.
Where I disagree, I am afraid, is on some of the hon. Member’s
examples. I did not plan to say this, but during the pandemic, my
second cousin—a 15-year-old boy—died in a tragic accident of
auto-asphyxiation. It devastated the family, as can be imagined,
and happened in the pandemic when we were only allowed six people
at the funeral. If he had been taught about risky sex acts—he was
15, not a pre-pubescent child—and how to make sure he did things
safely, rather than just learning something from the internet
that then led to the end of his life, he might still be around
and his family might not be devastated. So, actually, because of
that personal experience I do have a problem with saying that we
should not teach any of this to our children.
The hon. Member picks out examples of the dice or whatever that
might sound frivolous, and I cannot judge how exactly things
played out in those schools—she might well be right that it was
played out by some teachers incorrectly—but the principle of
learning about things before people are legally able to do them
but when they are physically able to engage in them, which
15-year-olds are, I am afraid, could have been lifesaving.
My sister, who is a teacher in Essex, has worked hard to try and
incorporate some of those teaching methods into the school’s
RSHE, focused on an age-specific approach and on stories of
people such as my cousin and others, so we can talk about the
dangers of some of these things. We cannot know about the dangers
of things if we do not talk about them, or if we say that they
are just things that families need to talk about. I am afraid
most families will not do that because those kinds of things are
darn embarrassing to talk about—but also because you never think
your child will do something like that. I disagree with that
element of what we heard today. I do agree that there needs to be
oversight and I do agree that there need to be checks to make
sure that we are not just promoting risky activities; we need to
be talking about the risks of risky activities. Then, when people
are of age, they can make their own choices.
I want to reflect on the things I was planning to say in this
debate in the last few seconds I have. The UK Youth Parliament
ran a campaign for years to try to get RSHE better taught.
Elements of the campaign were about emotions and relationships,
and it was also about LGBT inclusive education—and that does
include T. We have seen the Fédération Internationale de Natation
ruling that competitors will not be able to swim unless they
transitioned before they were 12, so we are in a difficult and
complex world that we have to navigate. Broad-brush bans from the
Department are unhelpful; we need to be content specific and
school specific. The Department needs to show more leadership,
but we cannot exclude talking about trans people or these complex
issues in schools because that, I am afraid, would be very
dangerous.
3.40pm
(Thurrock) (Con)
I thank the hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown () for his speech, which
I know was deeply personal and very difficult to give. It really
illuminated what we are talking about and showed that our overall
approach has to be to prevent harm. I think we are all addressing
the subject in that spirit, but we are now in a deeply
unsatisfactory position in executing the delivery of this content
and we need to do better.
One of the reasons I championed the importance of relationships
and sex education in schools was that I had become concerned
about the increasingly sexualised environment in our society,
which sees young people exposed to sexuality and sexual practices
before they are sufficiently mature to handle them. As my hon.
Friend the Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge () said, social media and the
internet mean that we are all just one click away from
pornography. The content of some of that material is of a much
more exploitative nature than perhaps was available pre-internet,
which is why we need to equip all our children with the tools to
protect themselves.
We need to be able to teach young people about sex in a way that
emphasises emotion and intimacy, and all the issues around
consent and enjoyment. Their introduction to it can be about the
purely physical aspects, which can be harmful and mean that
behaviours can be normalised before children are able to properly
understand what a healthy sexuality is based on: intimacy and
consent. We have an environment that is difficult for both girls
and boys, and we need to ensure that we address the emotional
needs of both sexes, which are different.
For me, the importance of RSE is all about emphasising the
primacy of consent and respect. I want boys to feel that they are
able to call out sexually abusive behaviour by their peers when
they witness it, because we know from recent campaigns that being
a victim of sexually aggressive behaviour starts in schools.
I heard a horrendous example when I visited a local school on
International Women’s Day. I was with a group of 13-year-old
girls. Sometimes such visits go really well and there are loads
of questions, but this was one of those really difficult ones, so
I just lobbed it out there and asked, “How many of you have been
harassed?” The answer was every single one of them, and for most
it had happened in school. That abuse is exactly what we are
talking about. I want to make sure that girls feel empowered to
call that out and not just have to accept it.
The girls told me that they are pressurised into sharing intimate
pictures, which are then shared by phone. One girl said to me,
“If you make a stand, you just attract more attention to yourself
and end up getting more harassment, and if you comply you’re
easy. What are we supposed to do in those circumstances?” One
difficulty with making sure that we start to tackle these issues
at an age-appropriate time is, when is that time? The exposure to
this content is unregulated and children can be exposed to it at
a very young age.
I had high hopes that RSE would empower our girls and be an
important tool in the war against sexual violence, but I have
been horrified by some of the content highlighted by my hon.
Friend the Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge that is being
delivered in schools. As she said, anyone can be a provider. The
DFE needs to get a hold on that if it is going to protect our
children from harm. My hon. Friend highlighted the dice game,
which I was utterly appalled to see. It reduces sex to just being
about penetrative acts. Forgive me, but at the risk of being
romantic and sentimental, a healthy sexual relationship is about
fulfilment for both parties—it is not just about physicality.
As the hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown said, this is about
safety and safe sex. A dice that displays objects and where they
can be inserted is not a healthy approach to teaching people
about safe sex. We hear that young girls now think that the way
to avoid getting pregnant is to have anal sex—that that is safe
sex—but that is not without other risks. We can teach people to
have a healthier approach to their sexual relationships without
sex being reduced to physical interaction.
I have more to say, but at the risk of crowding other Members
out, I will stop there. If we are to churn out healthy children
with a healthy respect for each other, and a safer environment
for both girls and boys, the Department for Education needs to
get a proper hold on making sure that good content in this field
is circulated, and bad content is exterminated.
3.46pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge () for bringing forward this
debate. It is not an easy subject to talk about, to be truthful.
It is not one I feel at ease with, but I wanted to come here to
support the hon. Lady, because I realise what she is trying to
do.
Relationships and sex education is an essential issue, and a
crucial topic for young people to understand. We must all realise
that there is a time and a place for relationships and sex
education in schools. However, underpinning that is the right of
a family to pass on their morals and values, and not to be
undermined by teachers who do not know individual children and
cannot understand the family dynamic.
I am clear about what I want to see when it comes to sex
education: no young person should be unaware of how their body
works, but similarly, no teacher nor programme should seek to
circumnavigate the right of a family to sow into their child’s
life what they see is needed. That is especially the case in
primary school children—I think of innocence lost. The
Government’s relationship and sex education paper states
that,
“Regulations 2019 have made Relationships Education compulsory in
all primary schools. Sex education is not compulsory in primary
schools and the content set out in this guidance therefore
focuses on Relationships Education.”
Despite that, a worrying number of schools across the United
Kingdom have felt it necessary to teach children not only about
sex, but about gender identity and trans issues. Conservatives
for Women has said that children are being encouraged from as
young as primary school to consider whether they have gender
identity issues that differ from their biology—being male or
female—as the hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge
outlined. That leaves children confused for no other reason than
the misunderstanding, and it makes them believe that they should
be looking at their own gender issues. My humble opinion—I am
putting it clearly on the record—is that children in primary
schools are too young to be taught sex education at that
level.
(Canterbury) (Lab)
It may have already been mentioned by the hon. Member for
Penistone and Stocksbridge (), but there was a poster put
out in primary schools by Educate & Celebrate, stating:
“Age is only a number. Everyone can do what they feel they are
able to do, no matter what age they are”.
Does the hon. Gentleman agree that that is pretty alarming?
I share the hon. Lady’s concerns, as does the hon. Member for
Penistone and Stocksbridge, who set the scene very well.
How can we expect our children to understand such complexities,
and why should we force them to at an early age? It was clear to
me that the hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge was saying
that this age is too young. As grandfather of five—soon to be
six—I look to my grandchildren, who are of primary school age. I
can say that the last thing that their parents, or indeed their
grandparents, want is someone else teaching them about these
sensitive issues. It should be for a family to decide the correct
time and what approach they take.
I appreciate that the health and education systems are devolved,
that the Minister here has no responsibility for Northern
Ireland—I always mention Northern Ireland in these debates,
because it is important that we hear perspective on how we do
things in our own regions across this great United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland—and that the extremity of what
is being in schools does not currently apply to some devolved
Assemblies, but there is no doubt that this could evolve. I want
to reinforce with the utmost passion the importance of the family
unit, which is exactly what some of the curriculum is destroying.
I know that my concerns about that are shared by the right hon.
Member for Chingford and Woodford Green ( ), the hon. Member for
East Worthing and Shoreham (), and others in the House.
Nobody knows a child better than their parent, and I for one do
not understand why the decision to teach children about sex and
relationships has been taken out of the hands of families—parents
and grandparents—wholly without their consent. The hon. Member
for Penistone and Stocksbridge gave examples; I am concerned
about similar examples back home in Northern Ireland.
I believe that sex education in high schools should be taught
within the parameters of biology—that is the way it should be—and
that pupils should be taught the value of understanding
themselves emotionally. However, the problems arise when the
curriculum allows teachers to seek to mould minds, rather than
allowing children to formulate their ideas and feelings. We must
bear in mind that there is a line between what a child should be
taught in school and what a parent chooses to teach their
children at home.
The Northern Ireland framework for sex education states that it
should be taught:
“in harmony with the ethos of the school or college and in
conformity with the moral and religious principles held by
parents and school management authorities.”
That is what we do in Northern Ireland, and I think we can all
hold to that statement as being not too far away from what we
should be doing—but those moral and religious principles held by
parents and school management have become somewhat ignored.
It is crucial that we do not unduly influence young people or
pupils’ innocent minds by teaching extreme sex and gender
legislation. I have seen some material taught in Northern
Ireland, such an English book that refers to glory holes, sexual
abuse of animals and oral sex. That book was taught to a
13-year-old boy, whose parents were mortified whenever they saw
it, and the young boy had little to no understanding of what was
going on. I wrote to the Education Minister in Northern Ireland,
asking how that book could ever be on a curriculum and what
possible literary benefit—there is none—could ever outweigh the
introduction of such concepts.
There needs to be a greater emphasis on the line between what is
appropriate to be taught at school and at home, and a greater
respect for parents and what they want their children to be
taught. Family values should be at the core of a child’s
adolescence education, as it is of a sensitive nature and needs
to be treated carefully, with respect and compassion.
3.52pm
(Aberconwy) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Dowd. I
congratulate my hon. Friends the Members for Penistone and
Stocksbridge () and for Thurrock (), and the hon. Member
for Canterbury (), on securing this
important and timely debate. I also thank the hon. Member for
Brighton, Kemptown () for sharing his
experiences. I acknowledge the pain in his contribution; there is
a lesson in there, I am sure.
I approach this debate not as an academic, although I have taken
care to speak at length with educationalists and professionals
over the last year about some of these matters. I also do not
bring lived experience or trauma; I was fortunate with my own
upbringing and introduction to sex through education, and in my
life, but I recognise that that is not everybody’s experience. I
seek to approach the issue as a parliamentarian, as we all do,
representing those who have brought concerns to us—concerns for
the safety of those who speak to us, about misunderstanding, and
for the safety and wellbeing of others.
I have spoken to teachers who have been put on the spot when it
comes to making decisions in school about the materials they are
being asked to use. Reference has already been made to the Cass
review and the dangers of putting teachers in a position where
they must make a clinical decision although they are not
clinicians. I have spoken to parents who are desperate and feel
disarmed, without the tools to reach and help their own children,
who they see are confused on matters of identity, sexuality, sex
and gender. My hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and
Stocksbridge made an important point: we must not lose sight of
the fact that teachers are in loco parentis. Sending a child to
school and conveying them into the care of another person
involves a special level of trust, so to see that damaged in this
way is compelling for me as a parliamentarian.
We want our schools to be safe places with trusted teachers,
where learners can flourish and grow. One expert told me that
good sex education includes helping learners to understand the
sexed body; to make decisions about health, contraception and
their own boundaries; and to understand the law, so that they can
keep safe, seek help when needed and respect the boundaries of
others. The expert also told me that it is important to help
learners to understand how to critique messages.
I cannot add to the case laid out by my hon. Friend the Member
for Penistone and Stocksbridge that children and learners are
being systematically exposed to inappropriate materials that
confound and frustrate those three objectives. I support her
belief in the principle of sunlight as disinfectant, and I
welcome the support of the hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown in
recognising the importance of visibility of materials to parents,
governors and those who have an interest in the issue. I also
fully support the urgent review of guidelines with the
appropriate tightening that my hon. Friend called for.
As we have heard, this is a contested area. It is not a settled
matter, which is the reason we are having the debate. I want to
mention gender and gender identity, because the materials cited
and delivered often use or reflect a certainty that simply is not
there. I want to make one key observation about this in the
couple of minutes I have left. In the debates that I have heard,
we all agree on three things: we want children to be true to
themselves; we want them to be accepted; and we want them to be
respected and valued as individuals. There is no question about
that, but it starts to be problematic when I hear phrases such as
“my truth” and “moral relativism”, creeping into the materials
that we see, because this is existentialism—anyone can look that
up.
We can go back a long time to see the weaknesses in
existentialism and the risks associated with it. It was Søren
Kierkegaard who outlined some of the risks and conclusions of
this form of thinking. He pointed out that existentialism ends in
three things. The first is inauthenticity, yet we have said that
one of our objectives is to be authentic. Secondly, he said that
alienation is another consequence of existentialism and moral
relativism, yet we have said that we want children to be
accepted, not outcast. Thirdly, he warned against the degradation
of individuals into objects or things, and we heard my hon.
Friend the Member for Thurrock talk about how sex is more than
just gratification and the use of another person to satisfy our
desires. It cannot be that we use a philosophy to deliver
something that confounds its very purpose. If we seek
true-to-self acceptance, respect and value as individuals, we
cannot us a morally relativist approach that promises exactly the
opposite of those things: inauthenticity, alienation and the
degradation of the individual as an object.
I will conclude by saying that we are talking about materials,
which are the tip of the iceberg. The process of how they came
about, and the thinking behind them, needs the Minister’s urgent
review.
3.59pm
(Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
(Alba)
I pay tribute to the hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge
() for securing this really
important debate, although there is clearly a separate
legislative process in Scotland, as the hon. Member for
Strangford () just said. I recognise the support and assistance
that she has offered me during my time in this place, and the
support from other Members present.
While this debate is England and Wales-focused, it is important
to highlight the Scottish perspective. This is not a matter of
moral outrage or social conservatism, which is a label that is
often used. This, for me, is essentially, fundamentally, about
safeguarding. Safeguarding has been a constant in my professional
life, from my early days in mental health care and looking after
vulnerable people through that lens, right up to working with
children and young people in cancer care. The principles are
about engendering a broad awareness in an organisation of the
kinds of issues that may be faced and the kind of red flags that
may be seen. It is a shared responsibility and one, I believe,
that everyone in society should participate in. It is not
something that we should in any way put at risk.
Awareness has increased in recent years because of misdeeds in
religious circles, among sports coaches and teaching staff, and
indeed, from my experience, in healthcare, where people have used
their position of influence and authority for nefarious purposes.
Those who will abuse will find a way, and that is just a matter
of fact. Predators will go to great lengths to access those they
prey upon.
How have we responded as a society? We have had “stranger danger”
education, public awareness, and the introduction of safeguarding
legislation and policies. We have dealt with concerns in an open
and non-judgmental way. We have set up multi-disciplinary
practices through child protection teams and vulnerable adult
teams. We have not jumped to conclusions and ascribed labels to
individuals, but we have taken the necessary steps to explore any
circumstance to ensure that, if there is harm, it is limited and
is stopped where that is the case. We have the disclosure and
barring service down here and Disclosure Scotland in Scotland to
ensure that those with a criminal history of a predatory nature
are identified and prevented from entering certain spheres of
life.
In my professional life, I have had enhanced disclosure in every
single job that I have had. It has never been a particular issue,
but there are implications of the use of deed poll to change
one’s identity, along with growing concerns about GRC identity
changes. On the DBS in particular, I met with an organisation
this morning that told me of privacy concerns whereby people who
use that method, or indeed deed poll, may be able to circumvent
the disclosure of prior history. I suggest that the national
insurance number could be used as a constant identifier to deal
with that.
But there are other ways that we find out about these nefarious
practices: disclosure from the child or the young person
themselves, witnesses, evidence and indeed criminal
investigation. In that vein, a teacher in Scotland was recently
sent to jail for three years for molesting two young boys, one
aged 11 and one aged 12. That investigation was peppered with the
sexualised language that that teacher used with those young men.
Like all predatory behaviour, this was about power, control and
manipulation, and it included that sexualised use of
language.
In terms of parents and safeguarding, we must look out for
changes in the behaviour of the young person—whether they become
withdrawn or start to use overly sexualised language. Those are
the red flags that are normally identified by professionals
working with young people, whether social workers, teachers or
indeed healthcare workers. If we introduce the type of language
and knowledge that the hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge
mentioned in her opening remarks—the dice game is utterly
shocking; it is dehumanising and reduces sex to the penetrative
act—
Does this not boil down to the very simple point that knowledge
without context or consequence is dangerous? Children at these
ages, who are often in doubt about who they are, where they are
and what they do, and who are sometimes shy and retiring, are
very vulnerable to that knowledge leading them down a road,
without the understanding of the context and consequences that
will come from the decisions that are made, which they may be too
young to judge. If that principle were applied, a lot of what my
hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge () has said would disappear
from the curriculum because it would be inappropriate.
The right hon. Gentleman makes a very important point about
capacity. It is simply impossible for someone who is seven to
have the ability to comprehend their adult sexual being. It is
simply unattainable.
Introducing such sexualised language will camouflage or mask the
red flags and that is dangerous. There is no place for adult
sexualised language in pre-puberty education.
4.06pm
Dame (Llanelli) (Lab)
I will try to keep my comments brief, as I can see the time
racing by. I will make reference to Wales, but the issues are
pertinent to all of us. This year, the Welsh Government are
introducing a new curriculum that will have fully inclusive LGBT
education for all pupils, with no right to withdraw. That is so
important. We have all stressed that status is important, as is
proper timetabling and training for teachers. We have the
protected characteristics of the Equality Act; all of those in
the LGBT community should be given respect. It is particularly
important for children to learn how to relate and how to cope
with peer-group pressure and bullying, particularly homophobic
and transphobic bullying.
It is important that materials that present society as it is are
part of the curriculum, so that children who come from same-sex
couple homes do not feel that they are different or odd, and that
means not just in the relationship curriculum but in materials
across all subjects. Age appropriateness is important, and
governors have the opportunity to look at materials, which is
commonly done, and should be practised across the board. Parents
should do the same, so that they can see exactly what is being
presented. It is really important to remember that we do not live
in a vacuum. In our day, it was just whispers in the playground
and nasty bullying; now, it is a whole range of stuff on the
internet, including pornography, plus massive bullying via the
internet, through social media.
I am an ex-secondary school teacher. Children are going to bring
things into school that we might not even know the words for,
frankly, so teachers need to be prepared. They need to be
prepared on how to combat that and how to discuss the issues. We
need materials that are positive, down to earth, factual and not
sensational.
Will the hon. Lady give way?
Dame
I will not, as I am so short of time—normally I would. We need to
gradually increase the degree of explicitness, as is age
appropriate. However, it is absolutely essential that the
information is taught in context and that, if children raise
issues about violent behaviour and different types of sexual
behaviour, teachers can talk through the dangers and
consequences. That is a valid discussion. Talking about a
particular piece of material on its own is not necessarily the
context in which it might be taught.
I would like to move on to the issue of trans individuals. Young
people will know of or will have encountered trans
individuals—they will certainly have heard about them. They need
clarity, because there is so much transphobia out there. They
need to have the topic talked about. It is perfectly valid to do
that in a school context.
The idea that any young person even begins to think about
themselves as trans on a whim is fanciful. It is a very long way
from beginning to think like that to telling somebody, never mind
going any further. Obviously, a teacher needs to know their
limitations and be able to access professional help, counselling
and interventions. It is not for a school to make any decisions
about a young person in that way.
Children are exposed all the time to all sorts of materials and
it is absolutely right and proper that, in a responsible way,
those in schools listen, take things seriously and present
down-to-earth, factual alternatives to some of the stuff they are
being shown.
So let us be clear about this. The overwhelming majority of
schools and staff, parents and governors, are highly responsible.
If there are instances where inappropriate materials are used,
those are the things that need to be dealt with. We should not
take a sledgehammer to crack a nut. I would be very wary of
rolling back on progressive, fully inclusive LGBT education. We
can call out individual problems that have occurred in individual
schools in individual types of material.
(in the Chair)
We are running slightly late. I call .
4.10pm
(Portsmouth South) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Dowd. I
thank the hon. Members for Thurrock (), for Penistone and
Stocksbridge (), and my hon. Friend the
Member for Canterbury () for securing this
important debate.
We have had a range of views and insights from Members today. The
hon. Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge spoke about the
quality of RHSE guidance and curricula and the age appropriate
material and its importance. She went on to give a range of
examples and she put a number of questions to the Minister. We
all look forward to his response.
My hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown () spoke with his
trademark passion about a range of relevant issues, including the
importance of specialisms in schools and quality materials. I
thank him for speaking from the heart about his own personal
experience with his loved ones. He gave a very tragic example of
why we have to get this right in our schools.
The hon. Member for Thurrock spoke about recognising the impact
that the internet has on schools and children, and about the
importance of teaching consent at a time when we see significant
harassment of women and girls. Other Members spoke about the
perspectives from Northern Ireland and Wales, which I am grateful
for. The importance of engagement with parents and the visibility
of materials that schools use were also mentioned.
There are a great many ways in which good quality relationships,
health and sex education can and must address the challenges that
our children face. Some of those challenges could define the next
generation. Sadly, most of them disproportionately affect young
women and girls, so I want to make sure we discuss the full
breadth of issues that this debate allows.
Labour Members believe strongly that quality RHSE must be part of
the curriculum for every school. The 2019 statutory guidance was
an important step forward, but the evidence suggests that too
many young people are not getting access to the information that
is needed both in school and at home. The pandemic has
undoubtedly disrupted the introduction of the 2019 statutory
guidance, but there is more that the Government can and should do
to prevent a looming crisis.
On the specific issue of information on gender identity for trans
and non-binary people, which some Members have raised in the
debate today, I would stress the importance of regularly
reviewing and updating guidance and signposting by the Department
for Education, and the need for training and support for all
teachers and staff.
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
I will make progress because I am conscious of time.
I would also point out a recent Sex Education Forum survey, which
said that almost 40% of students had been given no information
about gender identity or any information relevant to people who
are trans or non-binary, so I am very reluctant to accept the
opposing argument. In fact, the bigger problem appears to be the
lack of information on this issue.
In terms of how RHSE is delivered, there is obviously a balance
to be struck. I accept that this is a sensitive debate. That is
why guidance must be clear and regularly updated. Support and
materials for those teaching in the classroom must be
forthcoming. This is about being realistic, proportionate and
compassionate.
As we have heard in the debate today, children increasingly face
a wild west when it comes to RHSE. Too much is happening in
unregulated and unsafe spaces online. Not enough is happening in
controlled environments such as classrooms and in conversations
with parents. This is feeding a disturbing culture in which
sexual harassment is becoming normalised. The same survey by the
Sex Education Forum found that a third of children had not learnt
how to tell whether a relationship is healthy. More than a
quarter had learnt nothing about the attitudes and behaviours of
men and boys towards women and girls. One in three said they did
not learn how to access local sexual health services, and four in
10 learnt nothing about FGM.
Ofsted’s 2019 report on sexual abuse in schools put it best when
it said that
“Children and young people were rarely positive about the RSHE
they had received. They felt that it was too little, too late and
that the curriculum was not equipping them with the information
and advice they needed to navigate the reality of their
lives.”
I recently had the pleasure of meeting Nimue Miles, who is
passionate about improving sex education to combat violence
against women. She said of her own experience that sex
education
“doesn’t cover coercion…They don’t cover modern day issues like
social media…They also don’t cover sexist jokes, objectification
and the impact of pornography.”
Of course, those are complex and delicate issues, and as Ofsted
has pointed out, teachers cannot be left to handle them alone.
That is why improving the guidance and materials given to
teachers is so important, and we must make sure that is
delivered.
I therefore have some questions for the Minister. How many of the
10 recommendations made by Ofsted’s review of sexual abuse in
schools and colleges have the Government implemented? Will he
commit today to provide and improve training for teachers and
staff and deliver the materials they need, in one place and in a
timely manner, to aid lesson planning during the academic year?
What steps is he taking to help schools and colleges shape their
curriculum? When does he expect to fulfil the pledge set out in
the schools White Paper to
“create and continually improve packages of optional, free,
adaptable digital curriculum resources for all subjects”?
How will the Minister improve the advice he is providing to
parents and carers about how to support teachers’ work at home?
What conversations has he had with the Secretary of State for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport about defining categories of
harmful online content on the face of the Online Safety Bill, and
has he made representations that the scope of that Bill should
cover all services likely to be accessed by children?
Labour strongly believes that relationship, health and sex
education must be an indispensable part of any curriculum. We
want to see young people leaving school ready for work and for
life, and such education is an essential part of that aim. As it
stands, RHSE provision is failing our children and leaving them
open to a world in which sex and relationships are misunderstood,
harassment is commonplace, and unhealthy and damaging behaviours
are rife.
We have a responsibility to our children to ensure they can meet
the world as it is now, not as we think it should be or how it
was before. Most importantly, we have to give them the tools to
shape the world as it will be, and to protect themselves and look
after each other in a compassionate and inclusive way. At its
most basic, relationship and sex education is about legislation
and guidance, but in reality, it is about the information and
power we give to young people to shape their world. I hope we can
spend more time looking at it in that way, so that we can deliver
better futures for all our young people.
4.17pm
The Minister for School Standards ( )
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and
Stocksbridge (), along with my hon. Friend
the Member for Thurrock () and the hon. Member for
Canterbury (), on securing today’s
debate. I extend my thanks to everybody who has spoken in the
debate; I apologise if I do not have time to respond to every
single point that was made, but I think I can respond to many of
the points made by the hon. Member for Portsmouth South ().
I have listened carefully to some of the examples that have been
given by Conservative and Opposition Members, in particular those
cited by my hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and
Stocksbridge. There is no doubt that some of those things are
totally unsuitable for school-age children: “age is only a
number” is clearly an unsuitable phrase to be used in the context
of consent, and the Department has been clear that the Proud
Trust’s dice game is unacceptable for use as a school resource. I
have to say that, despite a lot of coverage of that particular
issue, we are unaware of any individual cases in which that game
has been used in schools.
High-quality relationship and sex education is important, and—as
my hon. Friend has set out, based on her own experience—can play
a key role in keeping children and young people safe, equipping
them to understand and resist harmful influences and
expectations. It can do so only if it is taught well and
appropriately, and good teachers working in good schools that
engage expertly with parents can find the right balance. To
support teachers to deliver in the classroom, we have run
expert-led teacher training webinars that covered pornography,
domestic abuse and sexual exploitation—topics that teachers told
us they find difficult to teach. We also published additional
guidance to schools on tackling abuse, harassment, and other
sensitive topics.
It has been almost three years since the Department published
statutory guidance on relationship, sex and health education, and
almost two years since relationship education became a compulsory
subject for all schools and relationship and sex education became
a compulsory subject for all secondary schools. As has been
acknowledged, primary schools can choose to teach sex education
in order to meet the needs of their pupils, but if they do so,
they must consult with parents on their policy and grant parents
an automatic right to withdraw their child from sex education
lessons.
Does the Minister agree that, given that point about parents
wanting to see the material, it is disturbing that my colleagues
and I have heard reports from headteachers that they are not
allowed or enabled to share that material from some of the groups
because it is deemed “commercially sensitive”?
Mr Walker
It is concerning, and I want to come to that in more detail,
because I think I can help provide some clarification.
At the heart of RSHE is the need to keep children healthy, happy
and safe. The hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown () gave a very powerful
example of where more education could make a difference in terms
of safety. I sympathise with his deep hurt. My hon. Friend the
Member for Thurrock also spoke passionately about safety and the
centrality of consent. That includes knowing the law on
relationships, sex and health, teaching about relationships from
primary school onwards and ensuring that younger children
understand the importance of building caring friendships and
learn the concept of personal privacy, including that it is not
always right to keep secrets if they relate to being safe, and
that each person’s body belongs to them.
In the schools White Paper, the Government committed to keeping
children safe by strengthening RSHE, as well as our statutory
safeguarding guidance “Keeping children safe in education”. The
hon. Member for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath () spoke about the centrality
of safeguarding in that. That will support schools to protect
children from abuse and exploitation in situations inside and
outside school. The guidance is updated annually, and it is clear
that schools and colleges should be aware of the importance of
making it clear that there is a zero-tolerance approach to sexual
violence. Sexual harassment is never acceptable. It should not be
tolerated and never be passed off as banter, just having a laugh,
part of growing up or boys being boys. Failure to do so could
lead to an unacceptable culture of behaviour, an unsafe
environment or, in the worst-case scenarios, a culture that
normalises abuse, so that children accept it as normal and do not
come forward to report it.
The RSHE statutory guidance advises schools to be alive to issues
such as sexism, misogyny, homophobia and gender stereotypes and
to take positive action to tackle those issues. As part of
relationships education, all primary school pupils are taught
about the importance of respect for relationships and the
different types of loving, healthy relationships that exist.
Pupils will also be taught about boundaries and privacy and how
to recognise and report feelings of being unsafe. To support
teachers to deliver those topics safely and with confidence, we
have produced RSHE teacher training modules, which are freely
available on gov.uk. We have also committed to developing a
further package of support for teachers to deliver lessons on
sensitive topics, such as abuse, pornography and consent. That
package includes teacher webinars delivered from March 2022
onwards and non-statutory guidance, which offers practical
suggestions for supporting children and young people to develop
healthy, respectful and kind relationships. The guidance has been
informed by an evidence review, stakeholder input and an expert
teacher group, and we will publish it this autumn.
The Ofsted review of sexual abuse in schools and colleges found
that online forms of sexual abuse are increasingly prevalent,
with 88% of girls and 49% of boys reporting being sent unwanted
sexual images and 80% of girls and 40% of boys pressured to
provide sexual images of themselves. The review also showed that
children, even in primary schools, are accessing pornography and
sharing nude images. We want to make sure that children receive
appropriate teaching in schools on topics that are relevant to
their lived experience, rather than going online to educate
themselves. Through the RSHE curriculum, pupils will be taught
about online relationships, the implications of sharing private
or personal data—including images—online, harmful content and
contact, cyber bullying, an overreliance on social media and
where to get help and support for issues that unfortunately occur
online. Through the topic of internet safety and harms, pupils
will be taught to become discerning customers of information and
to understand how comparing oneself with others online can have
an impact on one’s own body image. The Department is reviewing
its guidance on teaching online safety in schools, which supports
teachers to embed teaching about online safety into subjects such
as computing, RSHE and citizenship. The guidance will be
published in the autumn of this year. The Online Safety Bill will
also ensure that children are better protected from pornographic
content, wherever it appears online.
The statutory RSHE guidance sets out the content that we expect
children to know before they complete each phase of education. We
have, however, been clear that our guiding principles for the
development of the statutory guidance were that all the
compulsory subject content must be age-appropriate and
developmentally appropriate. It must be taught sensitively and
inclusively, with respect for the backgrounds and beliefs of
pupils and parents, while always with the aim of providing pupils
with the knowledge they need. Given the need for a differentiated
approach and the sensitive and personal nature of many of the
topics within the RSHE curriculum, it is important that schools
have the flexibility to design their own curricula, so that it is
relevant and appropriate to the context of their pupils. The
Department’s policy, therefore, has been to trust the expertise
of schools to decide the detail of the content that they teach
and what resources they use.
As mentioned previously, we have made a commitment in the White
Paper to strengthen our guidance in this respect. We will also
review and update that guidance regularly—at least every three
years. We are confident that the majority of schools are capable
of doing this well and have been successful in developing a
high-quality RSHE curriculum that is appropriate to the needs of
their pupils, but, in the context of this debate, it is clear
that that is not always the case and that there are genuine
concerns about many of the materials that have been used.
I stress that allowing schools the flexibility to make their own
decisions about their curricula does not mean that they should be
unaccountable for what they teach. Schools are required by law to
publish their RSHE policies and to consult parents on them. As
their children’s primary educators, parents should be given every
opportunity to understand the purpose and content of what their
children are being taught. In the RSHE statutory guidance, which
all schools must have regard to, we have set out a clear
expectation for schools to share examples of resources with
parents. Schools are also bound by other legal duties with regard
to the delivery of the wider curriculum. All local authority
maintained schools are required to publish the content of their
school curriculum, including the details of how parents or other
members of the public can find out more about the curriculum that
the school is following. There is a parallel requirement in
academy trust model funding agreements for each academy to
publish the same information on its website. It is our intention
that that should form part of the new standards for
academies.
My hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge raised
the point, which my hon. Friend the Member for Aberconwy () echoed, that last week, in a
Committee debate on the Schools Bill in another place, peers
highlighted the fact that some schools believed that they were
unable to share resources with parents because intellectual
property legislation placed restrictions on them. We are clear
that schools can show parents curriculum materials, including
resources provided by external organisations, without infringing
an external provider’s copyright in the resource. For example, it
is perfectly possible for a school to invite parents into the
school to view materials on the premises. Although of course we
have to be mindful of not overburdening schools with repeated
requests, we do expect schools to respond positively to all
reasonable requests from parents to share curriculum material. We
therefore expect schools to share RSHE content and materials with
parents openly and transparently, where requested. We are clear
that they should not enter into any contracts with third parties
that seek to restrict them from sharing RSHE resources with
parents.
The RSHE train the trainer programme, which we delivered from
2020 to 2021, brought to light several examples of good practice,
including in schools that had engaged with parents effectively,
but I apologise that I will not have time in this debate to
address those.
Many schools draw on the expertise of external organisations, as
we have heard, to enhance the delivery of RSHE, and many will use
resources that are produced externally. To help schools to make
the best choices, the Department published the non-statutory
guidance, “Plan your relationships, sex and health curriculum”.
That sets out practical advice for schools on a number of topics,
including using externally produced resources. Indeed, my hon.
Friend the Member for Penistone and Stocksbridge quoted from
it.
Concerns have been raised today about what schools teach pupils
on transgender issues. School should be a safe and welcoming
place for all pupils. We believe that all children should be
supported while growing up. However, we recognise that gender
identity can be a complex and sensitive topic for schools to
navigate and that there is sometimes tension between rights based
on the two protected characteristics of sex and gender
reassignment. We are working with the Equality and Human Rights
Commission to ensure that we are giving the clearest possible
guidance to schools on transgender issues. We will hold a full
public consultation on the draft guidance later this year. Given
the complexity of the subject, we need to get this right and we
want to take full account of the review being conducted by Dr
Hilary Cass.
I realise that my hon. Friend the Member for Penistone and
Stocksbridge will need time to respond, so I conclude by saying
that I hear very clearly the concerns that have been expressed.
As a parent of both a girl and a boy, I know that we need to
address these issues and to do so in a way that can reassure
parents but continue to deliver high-quality relationships, sex
and health education.
(in the Chair)
We only have just over a minute left, so I call to wind up very briefly,
please.
4.28pm
Thank you, Mr Dowd. I thank the Minister for his response. I am
looking forward to seeing the consultation on the guidance. I
thank everybody who contributed today. This has been a very good
debate. We have had some surprising areas of agreement. I think
that most of us have agreed that this is a very important topic.
The key phrase that has come out is “age appropriate”. I
personally do not think that it should be up to schools, teachers
or, potentially, parents to have to decide that. I think that we
need child development experts on the case to determine which
materials are suitable for which time.
I will conclude by reflecting on the speech from my hon. Friend
the Member for Thurrock (). Family is key to this,
and parents’ values and parents’ choice are so important. We must
never teach relationships and sex education in schools outside
the context of respecting parents’ choice and parents’ values.
Parents are the people who love and are most invested in
children, and theirs are the views that we should most take into
account.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered relationship and sex education
materials in schools.
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