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Teachers' perceptions of the teaching of sexuality education in secondary schools in Pinetown district.

This study examines the way in which ten teachers in two schools In the Pinetown
District view sexuality education. Sexuality education is part of the Life Orientation
curriculum and teachers thus have an obligation to teach it. Teacher's perceptions of the
teaching of sexuality education in secondary schools are significant because in secondary
schools are found learners who have reached adolescence and are likely to be sexually
active and curious.
The secondary literature on sexuality education indicates that there are numerous
difficulties associated with teaching it, despite pressing reasons that it be well taught to
all school learners. High rates of teenage pregnancy and HIV infection in young learners,
particularly in South Africa, indicate the need for sexuality education. Difficulties in
delivering successful sexuality education include parental resistance, conservative
cultural and religious education, poor policy and inadequately trained or poorly motivated
teachers.
Learners need sexuality education to enable them to make informed decisions about their
sexual health and to assist them with developing their sexual identities. Sexuality is
deeply gendered and this means that sexuality education should be informed by a
knowledge of gender and a commitment to gender equality (which includes being
sensitive to issues of sexual orientation.
Under apartheid the schooling system was divided along racial lines and schools were
inequitably resourced . This has meant that today the schools formerly designed to
provide education solely to Africans remain poorly resourced and ill-equipped to deliver
sexuality education .
Ten educators of grade 8 to 12 learners in two Hammarsdale schools, five male and five
female and all African, isiZulu speakers, were involved in this study as respondents. They
completed a questionnaire and participated in a focus group interview. It was found that no sexuality education was given in Grades 11 and 12 but some
sexuality education was given to the junior grades, particularly Grade 9. 30% of the
teachers had no training and only 20% had tertiary training for delivering sexuality
education. Half were trained via Departmental workshops but as far as the teachers were
concerned, this training was not adequate and left them feeling uncomfortable teaching
certain topics. 90% of the sample felt that their school does not have sufficient resources to assist in the
teaching of sexuality education and only a third of respondents indicated that the school
management supported them in teaching sexuality education. 80% of the educators said
that sexuality education was not included in the timetable while only 10% of educators
maintained that they received support from parents.
The teachers said that the impact of sexuality education was undermined by parent
resistance, conservative cultural and religious values and by the fact that some teachers
had covert sexual relationships with learners. The teachers noted that it was the learners
who were most at risk who somehow were not included in or reached by the messages in
sexuality education
Female educators, in general, were more positive confident about the beneficial effects of
sexuality education for boys and girls.
It is obviously necessary that steps be taken to improve the delivery of sexuality
education and such steps should include working with parents, improving sexuality
education training and promoting peer education. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/1351
Date January 2007
CreatorsMchunu, Namisile Joyce.
ContributorsMoodie, Toni., Morrell, Robert Graham.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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