Education

CSOs blame removal of sex education from school curricula

Supreme Desk
8 Nov 2022 2:20 PM IST
CSOs blame removal of sex education from school curricula
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The minister argued that sex education should be left in the hands of parents and religious institutions and not taught in schools in a manner that would further corrupt little children who have access to phones and other technologies.

Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) on Tuesday faulted the directive by the Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, to the National Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC) to remove sex education from the Nigerian educational curriculum.

The Executive Director, Education as a Vaccine, Mrs. Toyin Chukwudozie, on behalf of 53 organizations, issued a statement in Abuja disavowing the directive.

The Supreme reports that the minister at the 66th Ministerial Session of the National Council on Education (NCE) gave the directive to expunge sex education from the curriculum.

The minister argued that sex education should be left in the hands of parents and religious institutions and not taught in schools in a manner that would further corrupt little children who have access to phones and other technologies.

But Chukwudozie said that anyone who had interacted with the curriculum would know that it was set up to provide support and guidance for adolescents and young people.

"These young people need to navigate through the changing phases of their lives that are so critical and mostly experienced while they go through basic and senior secondary education."

"This development is very unwelcome and erodes 20 years of progress made by the ministry of education and other state and non-state actors to provide wholesome education that meets the needs of learners at different levels."

"It appears the minister has not been provided with appropriate information and advisory by relevant officials about Nigeria's Family Life and HIV Education (FLHE) curriculum, the journey towards having this curriculum, and the impact on adolescents and young people.

"The FLHE curriculum was approved by the same NCE in 2002 because of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the constant rise in incidents among adolescents and young people.

"It is imperative to adopt strategies that will center this vulnerable group at the heart of prevention and response; one such strategy was the adaptation of the school curriculum," she said.

According to Chukwudozie, the FLHE curriculum is "a planned process of education that fosters the acquisition of factual information, the formation of positive attitudes, beliefs, and values, as well as the development of skills."

She said this would help them cope with the biological, psychological, sociocultural, and spiritual aspects of human life.

She said that the curriculum was aimed at providing information and skills that were necessary for young people to make rational decisions about their bodies.

She added that the curriculum was not against any religious or cultural groups or teachings in the country.

"It is pertinent to mention that parents, teachers, traditional and religious leaders, policymakers, and implementers across all states of the federation were actively involved in the drafting of the content of the FLHE.

"As with a curriculum that has been implemented for 20 years, huge resources have been invested in making this implementation effective, both by the government, donors, and civil society."

"From the research, numerous consultations, and workshops to effectively incorporate it in school subjects working with the NERDC, to the training of teachers to be equipped to effectively deliver lessons."

"The implementation addresses and supports learners to navigate experiences that come with their social, physical, and mental development," she said.

The executive director also recalled that in June 2022, the minister signed, on behalf of the government, the Freetown Manifesto on Gender Transformative Leadership in Education, committing, among other things, to supporting strategies to address harmful gender norms in pedagogy.

According to her, the FLHE is one strategy that the ministry of education has employed to achieve this.

"We, the civil society groups, reject this sudden regression." We as Nigerian parents, educators, learners, and advocates are expecting conversations on how we will improve the quality of the delivery of the FLHE program and its long-term sustainability.

"We urge the 36 commissioners of education to properly inform the minister of the implications of such a declaration and to fully support the FLHE implementation with the allocation of adequate resources to reach millions of Nigerian learners with lifesaving information and skills to reach their full potentials," she said.

Among the 53 CSOs who endorsed the statement are the African Girls Empowerment Network, the African Network of Adolescents and Young Persons (ANAYD), Alliances for Africa (AFA), and Amaclare Connect and Development Initiative (ACDI).

Others are Association for Reproductive and Family Health (ARHF), Association of Positive Youths in Nigeria (APYIN), Bella Foundation for Child and Maternal Care, Bridge Connect Africa (BCA) and Cara Development Foundation (CDF).

In the list are also the Cedar Seed Foundation Centre for Girl's Education Africa (CGE), Child and Youth Protection Foundation (CYPF), Child Shield Initiative,

Civil Society Coalition to End Child Marriage in Nigeria, the Deaf Women Aloud initiative, and DO Foundation International

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