This week is Sex and Relationships EducationWeek on Teachers TV, so teachers will have the opportunity to see many programmes and share ideas in a really concentrated way. Content will be repeated throughout the week and is available in a timetable here.
To help teachers to find useful resources easily Contraception Education has created a quick to access summary page of 4 excellent programmes which focus on different aspects of SRE - Special Needs, Tackling STI's, Sexuality and Challenging Sterotypes at http://www.contraceptioneducation.co.uk/sdays.asp?news_id=469
We welcome contributions from teachers, youth workers, parents and young people about sex education and sex education materials
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Connexions Safe Sex Quiz
For a great new quiz about safe sex have a look at this on the Connexions website. It has 5 simple questions, true or false answers, giving some very clear infomration about UK legal age of consent, condom availability, emergeincy contraception and the myth that girls can't get pregnant when menstruating. What do you think?
Labels:
Promoting safer sex,
Safe sex,
Safer sex,
Safer sex education
Friday, January 2, 2009
QCA Sex and Relationships Education Units
QCA Sex Education Units of Work and useful websites are available here
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Contraception Education's visit to China

To find out all about our recent trip to China please visit this page and to follow press coverage please click here
Friday, October 24, 2008
Compulsory PSHE, maybe?
Schools Minister announces statutory PSHE
DCSF has published the report by the group that was established
to review the delivery of Sex and Relationships Education (SRE) in
schools; and the Government response to the group's report.
The review was announced in the Children's Plan, in December 2007. The
steering group that undertook the review comprised practitioners
involved in the planning and delivery of SRE; experts in young people's
sexual health; representatives of faith groups; and young people. The
review was co-chaired by Schools Minister Jim Knight, Jackie Fisher,
Principal of Newcastle College and Josh McTaggart, a member of the UK
Youth Parliament. The group's independent report includes a number of
recommendations to Government, designed to improve the quality and
consistency of SRE in schools, to which the Government has responded.
The steering group's headline recommendation is that PSHE should be made statutory and be supported by a statutory programme of study (PoS) - in order to give it increased status/priority in schools.
The Government has accepted the arguments for statutory PSHE and agreed to undertake a
review headed by Sir Alasdair MacDonald to consider how to turn the decision that PSHE should have statutory status into a practicable way forward.
In addition, the Government will accept, or agree to consider further, all
of the steering group's other recommendations, designed to improve the
delivery of SRE. Recommendations broadly fall into 6 headings:
Those designed to improve the skills and confidence of those who deliver SRE - the key delivery challenge;
Those designed to encourage greater use of external professionals and agencies to support schools' delivery of SRE;
Those that address the need for more guidance and support on how best to deliver SRE;
Those designed to increase young people's opportunities to influence the design of their SRE programmes;
Those aimed at maximising the impact of wider Government programmes on the quality and consistency of SRE; and
Those designed to improve leadership on SRE, in terms of both school leadership teams and strategic oversight by Local Authorities and PCTs.
The report also considered how best to ensure that schools and parents could work in partnership to educate children and young people about sex and relationships.
DCSF has published the report by the group that was established
to review the delivery of Sex and Relationships Education (SRE) in
schools; and the Government response to the group's report.
The review was announced in the Children's Plan, in December 2007. The
steering group that undertook the review comprised practitioners
involved in the planning and delivery of SRE; experts in young people's
sexual health; representatives of faith groups; and young people. The
review was co-chaired by Schools Minister Jim Knight, Jackie Fisher,
Principal of Newcastle College and Josh McTaggart, a member of the UK
Youth Parliament. The group's independent report includes a number of
recommendations to Government, designed to improve the quality and
consistency of SRE in schools, to which the Government has responded.
The steering group's headline recommendation is that PSHE should be made statutory and be supported by a statutory programme of study (PoS) - in order to give it increased status/priority in schools.
The Government has accepted the arguments for statutory PSHE and agreed to undertake a
review headed by Sir Alasdair MacDonald to consider how to turn the decision that PSHE should have statutory status into a practicable way forward.
In addition, the Government will accept, or agree to consider further, all
of the steering group's other recommendations, designed to improve the
delivery of SRE. Recommendations broadly fall into 6 headings:
Those designed to improve the skills and confidence of those who deliver SRE - the key delivery challenge;
Those designed to encourage greater use of external professionals and agencies to support schools' delivery of SRE;
Those that address the need for more guidance and support on how best to deliver SRE;
Those designed to increase young people's opportunities to influence the design of their SRE programmes;
Those aimed at maximising the impact of wider Government programmes on the quality and consistency of SRE; and
Those designed to improve leadership on SRE, in terms of both school leadership teams and strategic oversight by Local Authorities and PCTs.
The report also considered how best to ensure that schools and parents could work in partnership to educate children and young people about sex and relationships.
Labels:
compulsory PSHE,
Safer sex education,
schools,
sre
Sunday, October 12, 2008
BRING IT ON! Advocates for Youth look at sex education in the current US political climate
Advocates for Youth take a refreshing look at sex education and other reproductive sexual health issues in the current US political climate.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Evidence of the effectiveness of Contraception the Board Game
Having undertaken a piece of research at the University of Manachester for her Masters in Population Health Sarah Bagshaw has made her report available at Contraception Education. The report follows what happened when groups of young people in a youth inclusion project played Contraception the Board Game in their evening sessions. Findings show acceptability of the game in facilitating open discussion, an increase in knowledge of STI's and change of attitude around the use of condoms to protect against sexually transmitted infection
For more information or to contact Sarah Bagshaw, the author, please contact us here
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