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Sexuality education in New Zealand : a policy for social justice? Katie Fitzpatrick

By: Fitzpatrick, Katie.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Sex Education.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2018Subject(s): New Zealand. Ministry of Education | EDUCATION | GOVERNMENT POLICY | SCHOOLS | SEXUALITY EDUCATION | YOUNG PEOPLE | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/14681811.2018.1446824 In: Sex Education, 2018, 18(5): 601-609Summary: In 2015, the New Zealand Ministry of Education released a new curriculum policy document for sexuality education in all schools – Sexuality Education: A Guide for Boards of Trustees, Principals and Teachers. This policy is a rare international example of a curriculum document that explicitly values diversity, promotes inclusive school environments, and approaches sexuality education as an area of study (rather than a health promotion intervention). Since its release, the document has, however, gained little attention either of a scholarly nature or in terms of dedicated implementation in schools. One exception is a recent article in this journal by Sarah Garland-Levett, which raises some interesting and important concerns about the possibilities of such policy documents. I follow her lead here and continue the discussion about the place and potential of progressive sexuality education policy, and offer some thoughts about the content and intentions of this text. (Author's abstract). Record #8314
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Sex Education, 2018, 18(5): 601-609

In 2015, the New Zealand Ministry of Education released a new curriculum policy document for sexuality education in all schools – Sexuality Education: A Guide for Boards of Trustees, Principals and Teachers. This policy is a rare international example of a curriculum document that explicitly values diversity, promotes inclusive school environments, and approaches sexuality education as an area of study (rather than a health promotion intervention). Since its release, the document has, however, gained little attention either of a scholarly nature or in terms of dedicated implementation in schools. One exception is a recent article in this journal by Sarah Garland-Levett, which raises some interesting and important concerns about the possibilities of such policy documents. I follow her lead here and continue the discussion about the place and potential of progressive sexuality education policy, and offer some thoughts about the content and intentions of this text. (Author's abstract). Record #8314