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It
really is time to talk about sex
Victoria
John, Mail & Guardian (SA)
April 26, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-04-26-it-really-is-time-to-talk-about-sex
Teachers struggle to educate their pupils about sexual matters that
they can’t even negotiate in their own lives - like using
condoms.
A fearful reluctance
among teachers to talk about sex exacerbates their pupils' risk
of contracting HIV and Aids, falling pregnant and being discriminated
against on the basis of their sexual identities, academic research
into sexual education at schools suggests.
"Teachers
couldn't even say the word 'sex' when I spoke to them during my
research. They'd say: 's-s-s-sex' or 'that thing' or 'you know what
I mean'," said Jean Baxen, a professor of education at Rhodes
University.
She was speaking
at a two-day colloquium on sexuality, society and pedagogy at the
University of the Free State this week. Academics from across the
country presented papers on topics that included "sugar daddy"
relationships and the teaching of sexuality in South African higher
education.
"We need
to change the way teachers are taught how to teach sexual education,"
Baxen told the Mail & Guardian during the colloquium. "We
should start with getting teachers to confront their own ideas
about sex." The research paper she and her colleague from Rhodes,
Lesley Wood, presented at the colloquium, titled Mediating Sexuality
and HIV and Aids in Schools: Implications for Teacher Education
Preparation Programmes, was based on interviews she conducted with
80 life-skills teachers in Mpumalanga and the Western Cape.
Her project
was to provide answers to two questions: Are teachers comfortable
and skilled enough to mediate messages about our private lives?
And are classrooms the best places to discuss sexuality and HIV
and Aids?
Conflict
between personal beliefs and professional obligations
The "complex
interplay between teachers' individual, social and professional
identities and the content taught in sexuality and HIV and Aids
lessons do not always enable them to teach in a way that encourages
behavioural change", she found.
"For example,
teachers found it hard to teach pupils about condoms when they can't
even negotiate condom use in their own relationships."
Last month Health
Minister Aaron Motsoaledi said that 94 000 schoolgirls fell pregnant
across the country in 2011. HIV and Aids among pupils also remains
an urgent concern: the National HIV and Syphilis Antenatal Prevalence
Survey in 2009 reported that 13.7% of teenagers between the ages
of 15 and 19 were HIV positive.
HIV and Aids
in the context of "sugar daddy" relationships was the
subject of Cheryl Kader's paper. A Durban teacher studying towards
a PhD at the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Kader asked
how young women handle these transactional relationships when they
know they are at risk of contracting HIV because their sugar daddies
had sexual relationships with other women.
One of the five
women between 18 and 25 she interviewed for the paper said she didn't
know of any "sugar babe" who used condoms with her sugar
daddy. Kader found that young women became "sugar babes"
for different reasons - some so they could "put food on the
table", others so they could "live the high life".
"The central
story line that emerges is that within the sugar daddy relationship
the 'sugar babe' is sometimes the victim, but other times the vixen,"
Kader said.
These women
are "pushing back the anxieties around sexuality in the context
of HIV and Aids" in the process of "getting not only what
she needs but also what she wants".
Community
beliefs
Baxen said attitudes
prevalent in some communities hindered sexual education at schools.
"Teachers said parents continually told them that teaching
children about sex would encourage pupils to have sex at an earlier
age," she told the M&G.
The words used
for HIV and Aids in communities were euphemistic and derogatory
because some people believed "even just saying the word invoked
[the risk of catching] it", she said. "Some of the names
for HIV and Aids that participants [in her research] had heard included
'the beast', 'the sickness' and 'the lotto'."
Because teachers'
"personal lives always get in the way", they might not
be the best people to provide the necessary education. Baxen suggested
alternatives such as peer education programmes or getting "outside
people" to give sexual education as part of sustainable programmes.
"Community
members who not only know the children and the context but are also
respected in and out of the school could be used to give lessons
on sex."
The same reluctance
to talk about sex that Baxen and Wood identified also served to
discriminate against some pupils' sexual orientation.
Legally, schools
must ensure that all children, regardless of sexual orientation,
are treated equally, but many schools reinforce damaging sexual
stereotypes, said Deevia Bhana, education professor at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal.
For her paper
entitled Moffies, Gays, Isitabane: Learning "Straight"
and the Implications for Sexuality Education, Bhana surveyed 620
schoolchildren from different race groups, mostly in grades 10 and
11 at five schools in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng. She asked whether
they thought teachers would support a homosexual pupil, among
other questions.
A 19-year-old
male pupil responded: "Gay people should be killed so that
we don't have any more gay people in our country."
A 15-year-old
female pupil said: "I do believe that pupils should be educated
about homosexuality to change the mind-set of those who believe
there is something wrong with it."
Pupils' attitudes
to homosexuals were wide-ranging, Bhana told the M&G, with conservative
and liberal views traversing race groups and geography. But boys
showed more homophobic attitudes than girls, and pupils at schools
in rural areas were more conservative than those in urban areas,
she said.
"Teachers
did not address same-sex sexuality, and said they did not receive
any guidance about how to do so from the department of basic education,"
Bhana said.
The department
did not respond to the questions from the M&G.
"If you
have sex under an umbrella, the girl won't fall pregnant,"
said one pupil at Barnato Park High School in Berea, Johannesburg,
when asked what he had heard about sex and pregnancy from his
peers.
He was one of
more than 200 grade nine pupils who participated last week in discussions
on teenage pregnancy that the Umuzi Photo Club, a community photography
project, convened at the school.
The Mail &
Guardian heard the pupils sharing their beliefs about sex and pregnancy.
"If the girl drinks coke after sex then she won't fall pregnant,"
said one.
As the pupils
spoke, an Umuzi Photo Club activist listed their points on a piece
of cardboard. Four matric pupils, who are also Umuzi Photo Club
activists, then went down the list debunking the myths.
"Guys,
it doesn't matter where you're having sex, if it's in the shower
or whatever, you can still fall pregnant," said one.
Many of these
14- and 15-year-olds have been exposed to urban legends about how
not to get pregnant, said Carys Lavarack, co-ordinator of the project.
"We don't
know how many of these pupils are actually acting on these beliefs,
but the fact that they believe them is frightening," she said.
After last week's
dialogues with the Barnato Park pupils, the project leaders
compiled a report based on responses to a questionnaire by 100 pupils.
The pupils answered
questions about the discussion, including: "What myths did
you believe at the beginning of the class that you do not believe
now?"
Twenty-two said
they no longer believed that a girl drinking water and jumping up
and down after having sex would stop her from falling pregnant,
and 19 said they no longer believed that if a boy and girl have
sex standing up she wouldn't fall pregnant.
Twenty-three
pupils said they no longer believed that if a boy and girl have
sex in water, she would not fall pregnant.
The questionnaire
also asked: "In your opinion, what is the biggest challenge
in solving teenage pregnancy?"
Common answers
included: "Parents do not talk to their kids about sex, do
not educate them," and: "Teachers saying the wrong things
to pupils about sex and pregnancy."
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