The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children is challenging
calls for more explicit sex education for primary school children.
At present, sex education is not compulsory for primary school
children but the Government is currently consulting on whether to allow
teachers to teach more explicity about puberty, parts of the body, and
reproduction.
Under Government proposals, there are still some restrictions and pupils would not be taught "how reproduction occurs".
In a letter published in The Telegraph on 19 July, the Sex Education
Forum, Lucy Faithfull Foundation, Mothers' Union, UK Faculty of Public
Health and the Royal College of Nursing criticised the restrictions and
said the essentials of sex education should feature "unambiguously" in
the science curriculum.
They argued that more explicit sex education was necessary to protect
children from the risk of abuse and misinformation caused by accessing
explicit sexual images on the internet.
"Perhaps most worryingly, the [Government's] proposals undermine teaching children the correct names for genitalia," they said.
"This will perpetuate shame, and brings the risk of children not
having the language to understand their bodies or to recognise and
report sexual abuse.
"Children have a right to learn about human reproduction without feeling such subjects are taboo."
However, the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children questioned
the safeguarding argument and warned that it could lead to children
having an "unhealthy interest" in their sexual organs.
They added that including this teaching in science lessons, as
opposed to sex education lessons, deprived parents of their legal right
to withdraw their children.
In a letter of response published in The Telegraph on 22 July, SPUC
said: "This supposed need for children aged five to seven to be able to
name correctly their genitalia is not going to safeguard them.
"Quite the reverse, it will stimulate an unhealthy interest in their
sexual organs and is a violation of their privacy. Most parents are not
drawing their children's attention to genital organs and schools
shouldn't either."