• @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Since I didn’t immediately understand what this is about: “EVRAS” stands for “Relational, Emotional and Sexual Education” and it is a general guide for schools on how to educate school children on this matter. How many hours are advised, which topics should be talked about, etc. For example the UNESCO and the WHO research and work on EVRAS programs. But each school implements it differently, it’s just a framework.

    This is a summary on topics which are mentioned in the program. So it’s basically a help for teachers on how to talk about that stuff:

    • Promoting the respect between boys and girls, women and men ;
    • Offering the possibility to anyone to make informed choices and to act by respecting oneself and others ;
    • Preparing pupils to physiologic, psychologic and social changes linked to puberty ;
    • Offering the possibility to everyone to get necessary aptitudes to face every aspects of sexuality and romantic relationships ;
    • Promoting the capacity of everyone to communicate on sexuality, emotions, relations and to acquire necessary vocabulary to be able to communicate it properly

    Sources (hard to find because everyone’s talking about the arsons…):

    https://national-policies.eacea.ec.europa.eu/youthwiki/chapters/belgium-french-community/74-healthy-lifestyles-and-healthy-nutrition

    https://journals.openedition.org/brussels/6958

        • @[email protected]
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          09 months ago

          I can think of many things that could be argued as fitting in those categories that are happening in some countries that are unsafe. for example having books in schools that are already categorized as not suitable for children. you can find may youtube videos of parents trying to quote some of this books to the school boards and the school board usually shuts them up for indicency. so i don’t think that content that the school board is not comfortable with and think it’s indicent as safe. but you can frame it under ‘Promoting the capacity of everyone to communicate on sexuality, emotions, relations and to acquire necessary vocabulary to be able to communicate it properly’.

          • @[email protected]
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            39 months ago

            “Previously categorised as unsuitable to children” and “offends some school board members” aren’t useful metrics.

              • @[email protected]
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                39 months ago

                Something that contains information rather than just referring vaguely to what other people thought about it.

                Your last comment was a long paragraph with 0 actual information about what you consider unsafe.

                • @[email protected]
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                  9 months ago

                  can you be more specific? i shared information. its not safe to expose kids to pornographic novels, doesn’t matter if it’s lgbtq or not.

                  edit; to ellaborate and be as specific as possible, it’s not ok to have 10 year olds reading oral sex instructions and telling them that it’s not only ok but that it’s good to do it? so it seems unsafe to me to encourage a 10 year old to give blow jobs.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    49 months ago

                    Your edit is what I was looking for, specifics about what is and isn’t safe according to you. And for that specific one, I think that’s reasonable.

                    Though I don’t see even improved sex ed as ever teaching the specifics about how to do various sexual acts. It would be more of a dos and don’ts list. Like don’t reuse toys without cleaning them, be aware that sexual fluids have enough volume to sustain bacterial and fungal life, so you should always clean your toys after use. Or if you’re rubbing your skin raw, use some lubrication. Or that it’s normal for there to be a bit of pain the first time, but if it keeps up like that, you might have a medical issue that a doctor can help with. Or how to tell the difference between normal discharge and abnormal discharge that should be checked by a doctor. Or symptoms of early pregnancy and how tests work.