Sex and Relationship Education Motion made, and Question
proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—(Chris Heaton-Harris.)
10.02 pm Mrs Maria Miller (Basingstoke) (Con) Four
Members have already told me that they wish to intervene, so I hope
that others will bear with me. I think that that will probably be
as much as we can contain within the time available....Request free trial
Sex and Relationship Education
Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now
adjourn.—(Chris Heaton-Harris.)
10.02 pm
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Mrs (Basingstoke)
(Con)
Four Members have already told me that they wish to
intervene, so I hope that others will bear with me. I think
that that will probably be as much as we can contain within
the time available.
Children have their first mobile phones when they are nine.
Many have smartphones, with unlimited and sometimes
unfettered access to the worldwide web and everything it
has to offer, so we should perhaps not be surprised that by
the time they leave primary school, most children will have
seen online pornography and one in five will have had to
deal with cyber-bullying. By the time that they finish
secondary school, six in 10 will have been asked for a
digital nude or sexually explicit image of themselves,
usually by a friend. As a result, many will have discovered
that private digital images of themselves can be passed on
to thousands of people at the touch of a button. Removing
such images from the worldwide web is all but impossible,
which leads to difficult conversations with family, future
employers and friends.
When the Women and Equalities Committee was preparing its
report on sexual harassment in schools, we took evidence
from children themselves, who told us that sexual
harassment had become a normal part of everyday life. Women
are called bitches, sluts or slags, and one in three 16 to
18-year-old women say that they have experienced unwanted
sexual touching at school. Over the past three years, 5,500
sexual offences have been recorded in UK schools, including
600 rapes. Is abusive behaviour from the online world
seeping into the offline world? Perhaps; I do not know.
The facts might look pretty stark to the Members who are
present tonight. After hearing them, they might be less
surprised to learn of the latest Barnardo’s research
findings that seven in 10 children believe that they would
be safer if they had age-appropriate classes in sex and
relationship education at school. More than nine in 10
specifically said that it was important for them to
understand the dangers of being online, especially when
sharing images.
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(Congleton)
(Con)
I understand and share my right hon. Friend’s concern about
there being improved relationship education in schools,
particularly for younger children, but does she agree that
many parents would be concerned—I would be extremely
concerned—if teaching sex education to primary school
children was compulsory?
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Mrs Miller
My hon. Friend is right that parents need to have a voice
in all this, and I am sure that any consultation carried
out by the Government would take that into account.
Research published today by Plan International UK shows
that eight in 10 adults in this country want sex and
relationship education for children at school, but my hon.
Friend is right that it has to be age-appropriate. In
primary schools, for the most part, we are talking about
making sure that children understand what a good and
healthy relationship looks like.
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(Strangford) (DUP)
I congratulate the right hon. Lady on raising this matter.
Further to the point made by the hon. Member for Congleton
(Fiona Bruce), it is crucial, as I have said previously,
that parents have control and oversight of what happens to
their children, especially when that pertains to outside
influences. Does the right hon. Lady agree that parents
first, as well as the Government, must consider that when
thinking about any changes in sex education?
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Mrs Miller
The hon. Gentleman is right that parents have a pivotal
role, but so do schools, and I was about to come on to
that.
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(Worthing West)
(Con)
rose—
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Mrs Miller
I am now, I fear, going to break my rules by allowing my
hon. Friend to intervene.
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I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for giving way. Many
of us did not get much from our parents, and many of us did
not pass much on to our children, but the truth is that
celibacy is the only thing that we cannot inherit from our
parents, and many parents are too embarrassed to talk about
these things to their children. Does she agree that it
would be a good idea if parents and teachers discussed what
children ought to know, and considered whether parents or
teachers, or both, should talk to them about it?
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Mrs Miller
As always, we hear pearls of wisdom from my hon. Friend,
who knows that involving parents in decision making, and in
determining ultimately what children really need to
understand, at whatever age, is exactly the right way to
proceed.
I know the Minister well, so I am sure that she will remind
us that some of the best schools already teach children
about mutual respect and self-respect, and about what makes
a truly loving relationship. They go beyond what is
currently compulsory—the mechanics of sex and the biology
of reproduction—and tackle relationships and the context of
a sexualised online world, because we need to help young
people to make better and informed choices in those early
years. However, it is surely clear to both me and her that
many schools do not take that approach. Why should we sit
by and allow children in those schools to lose out?
As I said, research published today by Plan International
UK shows that eight in 10 adults think that teaching sex
and relationship education should be compulsory in all
schools, regardless of their status. We need children to be
able to make informed choices. We need them to understand
that sexting is illegal, and that it could affect their
mental health, leave them open to extortion and perhaps
limit their future career choices. We need them to
understand that pornography does not reflect reality, and
that bullying behaviour online is just as unacceptable as
bullying behaviour offline. To be honest, it might be more
accurate to call it relationship and sex education, because
what children need more than ever is to understand what a
healthy relationship really looks like. What they see and
experience online is, for the most part, not that.
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Dr (Twickenham)
(Con)
My right hon. Friend makes excellent points about sexting
and unwanted touching, but does she agree that nowadays,
given the insidious nature of early emotional abuse, it is
vital that every child in school can understand the signs
that it is happening?
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Mrs Miller
My hon. Friend, who has a great deal of expertise in this
area, is absolutely right. It is important that we give
children the right information at the right time—that is
what I am calling for.
Many of the reputable operators in the internet and mobile
communications world understand the real downsides of their
products, especially for children, and they are
increasingly trying to fit parental controls to sort this
out. However, at the moment those controls are only as good
as we parents are, and about 40% of parents use them.
Parents are conscious of the problems, but children use the
internet for an average of more than 20 hours a week.
Parents cannot look over their children’s shoulders at
every moment and many simply feel out of their depth.
There are reasons for optimism. In a recent debate on the
Children and Social Work Bill, Ministers clearly indicated
that thinking was under way. The Government have already
acted to show that they can work with the online industry.
We should all applaud the work that did to outlaw child
abuse images online. He showed that the internet industry
can act when it wants to. We can also welcome the work that
the Government are doing to put in place effective age
restrictions for online pornography websites.
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(Brighton, Pavilion)
(Green)
I congratulate the right hon. Lady on securing this debate
and the excellent work that her Committee has done in this
area. Does she agree that it is significant that there is
now such strong cross-party support for moving in this
direction? Five Select Committee Chairs have now said that
this is an important issue. Does she also agree that the
statutory nature of her proposals is essential, because
that will mean that children will get good sex and
relationship education and personal, social and health
education? We need the teacher training to be done well so
that we can get good teaching.
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Mrs Miller
The hon. Lady makes an incredibly important point. We need
consistency but, as I pointed out earlier, we do not have
that at the moment. Placing provisions on a statutory
footing would provide such consistency.
The internet has changed everyone’s lives. For some, it has
normalised sexualised behaviours, which children can find
it difficult to respond to. I see the Barnardo’s research
as a cry for help. Parents have to take overall
responsibility, but schools have a pivotal role to play in
helping more children to understand what a good
relationship is and to make better decisions.
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(North Dorset)
(Con)
My right hon. Friend makes a cogent and compelling case.
When we are discussing schools in this context, will she
clarify that we are talking about not only local authority
schools, but the growing academy sector? It is important
that academies are included in such provisions.
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Mrs Miller
I am sure that one of the many challenges for Ministers
will be to ensure that every child can have the right sort
of support and teaching. I do not underestimate the
challenges that that will present, but I agree with the
essence of what my hon. Friend says.
We can pretend that what we are talking about today does
not affect children, or that parents have the all the
specialist knowledge that children need. Alternatively, we
who are entrusted to shape our communities can do something
different and act to clean up the internet, to support
parents, and to give children the understanding that they
need to make informed choices. Today’s debate is supported
by leading charities including Barnardo’s, the Terrence
Higgins Trust, the Children’s Society, the National
Children’s Bureau and Plan International UK, as well as by
the guides, the scouts and Liberty. They all want sex and
relationship education to be compulsory. At the moment,
schools are relying on guidance that was agreed more than a
decade ago when the internet was still out of most
children’s reach. They have failed to adapt to what
children need, and it is little wonder that Ofsted recently
judged 40% of schools to be inadequate in their teaching of
SRE.
Who are we to ignore children calling for change? Children
have only one chance of a childhood. We know the damage
that is being done by cyber-bullying, sexting and the
underage viewing of extreme pornography, and we have an
obligation to act. I therefore have a question for the
Minister, my friend from Hampshire: how will the Government
respond to the seven in 10 children who want change? What
are the Government doing, and when will that change happen?
10.13 pm
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Women and
Equalities (Caroline Dinenage)
I should like to start by congratulating my right hon.
Friend—and, indeed, my real friend—the Member for
Basingstoke (Mrs Miller) on securing this really important
debate. I share her view on the importance of children and
young people having access to effective, factually
accurate, age-appropriate sex and relationship education.
This is a subject that the Government take very seriously,
and we have welcomed the extremely helpful input of many
Members across the House and, not least, of my right hon.
Friend’s Women and Equalities Committee. We also welcome
the ongoing scrutiny of the Children and Social Work Bill.
The Government are committed to exploring all the options
to improve delivery of sex and relationship education and
personal social and health education and to ensuring that
we address both quality of delivery and accessibility in
order to support all children in developing positive,
healthy relationships and being able to thrive in modern
Britain.
The Government welcomed the Women and Equalities
Committee’s comprehensive report on “Sexual harassment and
sexual violence in schools” that was published in September
2016 and contained several recommendations, including
proposals relating to SRE and PSHE. I was honoured to take
part in an evidence session as part of that inquiry. I
emphasise that we are in full agreement that sexual
harassment and sexual violence in schools—no matter what
form they take—are absolutely abhorrent and unacceptable
and should not be tolerated.
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(Stroud) (Con)
I am grateful for what the Minister is saying. Does she
agree that the debate about SRE is intrinsically linked
with PSHE? This is about life skills and enabling young
people to deal with the challenges they will face later, by
having the capacity to understand what they are facing.
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Yes. My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We want to enable
young people up and down the country to face the challenges
of the modern world. We have given a great deal of
consideration to the recommendations that arose from the
Women and Equalities Committee’s inquiry. In our response,
which was published on 9 November 2016, we committed to
work with stakeholders, including teachers, parents and
pupils, to produce a framework that gives schools
sufficient support to produce their own codes of practice,
setting out a whole-school approach to inclusion and
tolerance while combating bullying, harassment and abuse of
any kind.
Despite the usefulness of the Committee’s important
evidence sessions, we recognise that the scale and scope of
the problem are still not yet fully understood. To improve
both our understanding and that of schools, we have also
committed to build our evidence base—a work programme that
is currently being developed by the Government Equalities
Office. That sits alongside a commitment to provide best
practice examples of effective ways to work with boys and
girls to better promote gender equality and respond to
incidents of sexual harassment and sexual violence.
Additionally, we have put plans in place to set up an
advisory group to look at how the issues and
recommendations in the Select Committee’s report can be
best reflected within existing DFE guidance for schools,
including “Keeping Children Safe in Education” and our
behaviour and bullying guidance.
There is more that we need to do. The Secretary of State
has made it absolutely clear that we need to prioritise
progress on the quality and availability of SRE and PSHE.
In making that progress, we must of course look at the
excellent work that many schools already do as the basis
for any new support and requirements.
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(Walthamstow)
(Lab/Co-op)
There is general agreement across the House that this is
the right thing to do. Likewise, it has been recognised
that with Brexit coming down the track our capacity is
limited to pass legislation to ensure that every school
does this. New clause 1 of the Children and Social Work
Bill would require every school, both maintained schools
and academies, to provide age-appropriate, inclusive
relationship education—the very education that we all want
to see happen. Given that and the time constraints—that
Bill is almost on Report—will the Minister commit tonight
to back new clause 1 or to come back with something exactly
like it on Report? There is no time left to ensure that we
make good on our promise to those children.
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My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State has been clear
that we will set out plans to move forward as part of that
Bill.
The existing legislation requires that sex education be
compulsory in all maintained secondary schools. Academies
and free schools are also required by their funding
agreement to teach a “broad and balanced curriculum”, and
we encourage them to teach sex and relationship education
within that. Many schools choose to cover issues of consent
within SRE, and schools are both able and encouraged to
draw on guidance and specialist materials from external
expert agencies.
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(Batley and Spen)
(Lab)
On that point, a Terrence Higgins Trust report found that
75% of young people had not learned about consent and that
95% had not been taught anything about LGBT relationships.
Even the UN is calling for SRE in UK schools to be
statutory. Does the Minister agree that it is time that the
Government respond to that request and make SRE statutory?
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Yes, the Government are looking at it as we speak. We will
set out our next plans for inclusion in the Children and
Social Work Bill, but we have to get this absolutely right.
It needs to be done sensitively, carefully and with
cross-party support. This has not been updated for the last
16 years, and my personal opinion is that respect for
oneself, respect for others, healthy relationships, consent
and all the other things that we really value as part of
SRE and PSHE are things that we must also ensure we embody
in a whole-school ethos, not just something we teach for
half an hour on a Tuesday.
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(Liverpool, Wavertree)
(Lab/Co-op)
Will the Minister give way?
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In a moment. The existing legislation also means that
Ofsted publishes case studies on its website that highlight
effective practice in schools, including examples of SRE as
taught within PSHE.
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rose—
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I will not make the hon. Lady keep standing up and sitting
down.
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I am incredibly grateful to the Minister. I echo the point
that the time really is now. We have been discussing the
issue in this House since the measure was not included in
the Children, Schools and Families Act 2010. Will she
confirm on the record this evening that, on Report of the
Children and Social Work Bill at the start of February, the
Government will either move their own amendment or support
new clause 1 to ensure that we have statutory SRE in every
single school in our country?
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As I have already said, we are currently considering all
the options and are committed to updating the House during
the passage of the Children and Social Work Bill. The
Minister for Vulnerable Children and Families will
definitely be bringing the measure forward as part of the
Bill, but the key is getting it right, not rushing it
through just to satisfy loud voices on either side of the
House.
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Just to translate, my right hon. Friend the Member for
Basingstoke (Mrs Miller) is talking about compulsory SRE. I
would call it comprehensive SRE. Do the Government have any
idea of how many young people miss out on effective sex and
relationship education? Will the Government try to ensure
that the number of young people who are missing out will be
reduced to virtually zero within a few years?
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The biology of sex and relationships is compulsory in
schools, but we want to see a much broader look at healthy
relationships, respect for oneself, respect for others and
issues around consent. Those are all things that we have to
look at very carefully as we move forward, which is why we
are encouraging schools to use the Ofsted case studies as a
resource while they tailor their own programmes to meet the
specific needs of their pupils.
In addition, in 2014 the PSHE Association, Brook and the
Sex Education Forum produced a supplementary guidance
document on sex and relationship education for the 21st
century, which provides valuable advice on what are, sadly,
the all-too-modern issues that my right hon. Friend the
Member for Basingstoke has already mentioned, such as
online pornography, sexting and staying safe online. That
useful guidance provides teachers with the tools to support
pupils on those challenging matters, developing pupils’
resilience and ability to manage risk.
As we have heard today, social media and interactive
services are hugely popular with children and young people.
They can provide fantastic opportunities for them to
express creativity, to learn digital skills and to improve
their educational attainment but, like all forms of public
communication, they come with a level of risk. The
Government expect online industries to ensure that they
have relevant safeguards and processes in place, including
access restrictions for children and young people who use
their services.
We have published a guide for parents and carers of
children who use social media, including practical tips
about the use of safety and privacy features on apps and
platforms, as well as conversation prompts to help families
begin talking to their kids about online safety. We have
also funded the UK Safer Internet Centre to develop new
resources for schools, including cyberbullying guidance
that helps them to understand, prevent and respond to this
issue, as well as an online safety toolkit to help schools
to deliver sessions through PSHE on cyberbullying, peer
pressure and sexting.
We are also talking directly to young people about healthy
relationships. The Government Equalities Office jointly
funded a £3.85 million campaign with the Home Office to
launch the second phase of the “This is Abuse” campaign,
called “Disrespect NoBody,” from February to May 2016. The
campaign encourages young people to rethink their
understanding of abuse in relationships, including issues
such as sexting. It also addresses all forms of
relationship abuse, including coercive and controlling
behaviour, and situations including same-sex relationships.
Some of the campaign materials contained gender-neutral
messaging, and others depicted male victims of female
perpetrators. It was targeted at 12 to 18-year-old boys and
girls, with the aim of preventing them from becoming the
perpetrators or victims of abuse in relationships.
As I said, we are actively considering calls to update the
guidance on SRE, which was issued in 2000. The feedback we
have received indicates that the guidance is already clear
that young people should be learning what a healthy
relationship looks like. However, we do not consider the
guidance we produce to be static, and we fully recognise
that there will continue to be changes to update it. We are
looking at the issue extremely carefully. As I have said,
it is essential that we do not rush things. We need to
adopt a fresh and responsible approach and listen to a
range of views from young people and parents alike.
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(Nottingham South)
(Lab)
The Minister is rightly setting out the useful advice,
guidance, toolkits, resources and campaigns that are
available, but does she agree that all those things, valuable
as they are, are not an alternative to ensuring that every
single school in this country provides high-quality SRE to
all our children and young people?
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Absolutely. I agree that we need to equip all our young
people to face the challenges of the modern world and
everything that it throws at them. We know that SRE is an
evolving and vital area of education, so we need to ensure
that we have guidance that is fit for children growing up in
modern Britain.
Our aim is to secure the very best teaching and learning in
our schools on these issues, as a matter of priority,
alongside providing the clarity for schools on what should be
delivered that I know Members wish to see. We recognise that
this is a really important issue, and will continue to
explore all effective means to remove sexual harassment and
sexual violence from young people’s lives. My hon. Friend the
Minister for Vulnerable Children and Families has committed
to update Parliament further during the passage of the
Children and Social Work Bill. I know that he will do his
utmost to achieve outcomes that keep young people safe and
supported to gain the skills they need to develop healthy and
positive relationships.
Question put and agreed to.
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