Asian Sexuality Education: requires a supportive system
Asian Sexuality
Education: requires a supportive system
By Pravina Sivakumar
Some youngsters obtain sufficient homework
concerning their sexual lives. Which makes them coerce, abuse and exploitation,
unplanned pregnancy, and sexually transmitted infections (STI), such as HIV.
Many youngsters reach elders faced with contradictory and complicated facts of
sexuality and gender. Usually, this increases by embarrassment, silence, and
objection to the open discussion regarding sexuality topics by grown-ups,
including their parents and teachers, each time when it is necessary.
Youngsters are growing sexually mature and active at an early age; later
getting married, so the time extends from sexuality debut to marriage.
“Sexuality education aims to provide
knowledge, skills to children and youngsters, and valuing to make efficient
decisions of their sexuality and social relationships, along with promoting and
nourishing risk-reducing behavior.”
Most importantly "Homosexuality" will be
precisely discussed by sexuality education. Daily, many of us getting connected
with homosexuals. Some are forced to deal with them at workplaces, schools,
neighborhoods, etc. Homosexuality is failed to be understood, which can be
quickly endorsed by youngsters who quickly underestimate it. Enlightening them
about heterosexuality and homosexuality may protect them from falling prey to
lurking homosexuals under society’s shades.
What are the
barriers to implement sexuality education?
·
Social-cultural
standards encircling the analysis of sex are very common barriers to
school-based sexuality education and youngsters' access to information about
STI; many researchers have examined the ways conventional social-cultural
standards contribute notable obstacles to efficient school-based sexuality
education in Asia especially.
·
Elders believing
that discussing/talking about sex with youngsters/children may encourage them
to engage in sexual activities cause another level of resistance, however,
studies affirm, qualified sexuality education delays sexuality debuting age and
decreases sexuality risk behaviors.
·
More specifically,
there is always a reluctance to provide sexual information to young women in a
school context because adulthood believes that the pre-marital activity of
women was forbidden than of men.
·
Believes in
religion and political aspects greatly influence many Asian countries in this
matter, thereby controlling analysis and studies regarding sex in schools and
broader social circumstances.
·
Traditional view
guiding that women must be humble, pure and must abstain from communicating
information regarding sex before marriage offers comparable restrictions on STI
and sexuality education.
Absence of a
supportive system
A supportive system is necessary for efficient
implementation, however, what creates allowing circumstances may differ from
setting to setting, based on national laws, policies, and implementing methods.
The policy reveals the government's position about sexuality education.
Policies require to be distributed to each implementing body and stakeholders
and formal devices are built to supervise implementation. More of high
significance are comprehensive approaches to implement policy all through the
school system, supported by sufficient economic resources.
Usually, education policies and laws did less
inclined to incorporate content about sexuality education than concerning
population, reproductive health, or HIV. Such denotes a progressive reduction
concerning ownership by the education sector and seems to encourage the notion
that considering HIV as a health sector issue hinders the education response to
the disease in several countries, with education ministries delayed to form
relevant policies.
In 2012, UNESCO attempted to outline some laws,
policies, and sexuality education strategies in the Asia-Pacific region. But,
this observed a noteworthy difference between countries. In that period, 20
countries held domestic HIV laws and policies, and 13 of them refer to the
function of education expressly. Nevertheless, solely Cambodia, China,
Indonesia, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, and Vietnam provided a comprehensive
classification regarding sexuality education in their policy frameworks; they
had special education division policies about HIV.
In 2009, International Technical Guidance on
Sexuality Education was published by UNESCO mainly as a reaction to HIV.
Although HIV prevention is necessary, evidence and practice show, sexuality
education holding wider importance not only to sexual and reproductive health
but also to their overall well-being and self-improvement.
This guidance offers sexuality with a certain
attitude, knowing that it is something apart from lessons of reproduction,
risks, and disease. This acknowledges sexuality education status inside the
core of human rights and gender equality. Also, this indicates the enrichment
concerning sexuality education to the achievement of the many internationally
recognized commitments to sexual and reproductive health, and to achieving the
goals of health and well-being, quality and all-inclusive education, gender
equality, and women empowerment by 2030.
The program reports and implementing approaches are
invariably identified concerning all laws and policies in Sri Lankan education,
gender equality and women empowerment, health and population, STD, and teen
concerns. But presently, there are various modalities are in the position to
implement sexuality education. To improve the youngsters' awareness concerning
the sexual and reproductive system, the Health Ministry and National Institute
of Education launched the Reproductive Health Education program.
Also, the Family Health Bureau began a School Health
Promotion Programme including a segment about Sexual and Reproductive Health.
Counseling services are providing by the National Youth Services Council as
well. However, the Gender Unit of the Family Health Bureau counseling and
information services are now enabled to both married couples or cohabitees. Sri
Lanka’s Policy Framework and National Plan of Action aims to focus on Sexual
and Gender-based Violence recognizes education and establishing awareness while
main precautionary steps to address such violence.
Hence, the national policies need to be implemented
in a local reality setting, including the political and social-culture
standards. Following the influence from advocacy and external agencies' aids
and community partners, policies regarding school-based sexuality education may
be inclusive and encouraging at the national level, however, may hold an
inadequate influence at schools when defied with standards preventing an open
discussion regarding sex. Inadequately formed policies may point to
insufficient certainty regarding stakeholder accountabilities to implement
school-level STI education.
References
Barriers to HIV and sexuality education in Asia,
Health Education, 114 (2). pp. 118-132. ISSN 0965-4283.
Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) in Asia: A
Regional Brief (2018), ISBN 978-967-0339-42-9.
International Guidelines on Sexuality Education: An
evidence-informed approach to effective sex, relationships, and HIV/STI
education, UNESCO (2009), Division for the Coordination of UN Priorities in
Education.
Sexuality education in Asia: Are we delivering? An
assessment from a rights-based perspective, by David Clarke (October 2010).
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