Pupils to learn about sex from age 5 – UK abandons parental rights and religious freedom

A longer version of this article appears on the Daily Telegraph’s website.

The Daily Telegraph – November 6, 2009
Pupils to learn about sex from age of five
By Graeme Paton

SEX education will be compulsory in all schools, it was announced yesterday. Ed Balls, the Schools Secretary, said parents would lose the right to withdraw their children from the lessons. Pupils in England will be given classes in sex and relationships from the age of five under government plans to reduce teenage pregnancies. Children will learn about parts of the body, the facts of life and puberty in primary school. At secondary school, they will be taught about pregnancy, contraception, HIV and homosexual relationships. Mothers and fathers will be able to keep children out on moral and religious grounds, but will lose that right when their children turn 15. The ruling, which will affect 600,000 pupils a year, is designed to ensure that pupils get at least 12 months of sex education before finishing compulsory schooling. But parents’ groups said the decision risked infringing their rights.

Faith schools will also be forced to teach all aspects of the new curriculum, including same-sex relationships, contraception and abortion. Ministers said they could stage lessons within the “tenets of their faith’. Mr Balls said: “You can teach the promotion of marriage. You can teach that you shouldn’t have sex outside of marriage. What you can’t do is deny young people information about contraception outside of marriage.”

Sex education will be introduced in 2011 as part of new compulsory lessons in personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE), the Government said. In the past, parents have been able to withdraw children from the sex education element of PSHE. Mr Balls said a “very small minority” of families exercised this power. Government research published yesterday suggested four in five parents wanted children to be given sex education, but almost a third insisted they should have the option to withdraw from lessons at any age.

Margaret Morrissey, of the campaign group Parents Outloud, condemned ministers for “infringing parents’ rights”. Paul Tully, general secretary of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, said: “The Government is removing the right of parents to protect their children from the explicit promotion of abortion and sexual health interventions in the latter stages.”

But Chris Keates, of the NASUWT teachers’ union, said: “Allowing parents to withdraw their child from sex and relationship lessons up to the age of 15 does not sit well with a statutory entitlement.”

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comments (2) | Leave a Reply
  1. Great. Britain’s teen pregnancy rate and STD rate will probably drop dramatically. Doing something similar in the United States would be a good idea, but there are too many parents in the U.S. who scream in horror at the very mention of the word “sex.”

  2. Grannie says:
    November 7, 2009

    Who was it said, “You can’t legislate morality”? Well, obviously, now in the UK, The State has become the TYRANT. AGAIN.


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