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The Conversation
The Conversation
Giselle Natassia Woodley, Researcher and Phd Candidate, Edith Cowan University

Mandatory consent education is a huge win for Australia – but consent is just one small part of navigating relationships

Unsplash/Sinitta Leunen

One year after activist Chanel Contos’ Instagram poll revealed more than 6,700 testimonies of sexual assault – often at high school parties – education ministers around Australia have unanimously agreed to mandate consent education in schools from 2023.

All Australian schools will be required to teach age-appropriate consent education – which includes coercion, gendered stereotypes and power imbalances – from foundation to year 10.

Currently, one in five women in Australia has experienced some form of sexual violence, with one in four of these being under 18 at the time. Evidence shows preventive education, including information on consent, is a powerful tool in reducing sexual assault.

So, a commitment to mandatory consent education is worth celebrating.

But the details around what schools can teach, what teachers are willing to teach, and what parents are willing to accept, are complex. And an exclusive focus on safety may come at the cost of the enjoyable benefits of human connection.

Young people say consent education now is ‘atrocious’

As part of an ongoing project, we asked teenagers and their parents about their perceptions of school-based sex education, their experiences of online and offline harm, and online pornography.

Adolescents as young as 11 shared personal stories of harmful behaviour, including breaches of consent online, such as receiving unsolicited sexual images, and people re-sharing nude pictures meant for private viewing.

The teenagers who said they’d received consent education felt they hadn’t been given the tools required to instigate or navigate a conversation about consent – nor had they been helped around how to communicate a firm, but respectful “no”.

One teenager said:

The education system needs to catch up, it is light years behind […] because to be quite frankly honest, the education we receive (in this area) is atrocious.

One teen told us about when a friend and his girlfriend’s loving relationship became sexual

[…]It wasn’t that it was non-consensual and that she didn’t want it but it wasn’t 100% […] but now because there was a minor little check that hasn’t happened, his life’s been completely thrown in the gutter […] part of the system failed because she didn’t know how (to communicate a lack of consent) and he didn’t know how to (obtain consent) properly.

This highlights the fact consent is often a blurry, difficult concept that needs clarification. It illustrates that consent can be revoked at anytime. Another teenager said:

(we’ve) only been taught “make sure there’s consent”, not how to check if there actually is consent.

It’s also often fear-based

Teens in our study have said the fear-based approach to sex education means they are less likely to share their experiences with their parents and caregivers for fear of being punished. Although, we also found teenagers are generally reluctant, embarrassed or otherwise unreceptive to talking about sex with their parents.

Research also shows the “just don’t do it” approach is akin to abstinence education. It increases the risks of teenagers looking to porn for information.


Read more: Sexuality education can counter what kids learn from porn, but some teachers fear backlash when tackling 'risky' topics


Such an approach overlooks the positives of expressing intimacy in safe spaces and denies young people’s real-world experiences of enjoyable, safe sexual behaviour both online and offline.

Young man lying on couch and looking through his phone.
Fear-based approaches to online sex education ignore many young peoples’ genuinely positive and safe experiences. Shutterstock

Given most parents did not receive consent education themselves, and many experience generational sexual shame that reflects traditional, cultural and religious beliefs, we expected many parents to be resistant to some parts of sexuality education, such as teaching about positive sexual experiences.

But most of the parents we spoke to supported better sex, relationships and consent education at schools. Many also felt they didn’t have the skills to delve into the nuances of consent and relied on schools to supply that information.


Read more: 4 out of 5 parents support teaching gender and sexuality diversity in Australian schools


‘Consent’ is just the start of good consent education

What constitutes comprehensive relationships and sexuality education has been discussed for many years, but includes consent education.

Experts agree consent education includes more than simply discussions around “no means no”. The conversation should include how to maintain and respect boundaries, managing rejection, and balancing giving consent with aspects of pleasure and desire.


Read more: Not as simple as 'no means no': what young people need to know about consent


Too great a focus on consent, using a fear-based sex-negative approach (think of phrases like, “Are you sure?” “Are you absolutely certain?”) fails to acknowledge and respect the positive and pleasurable aspects of intimate human relationships.

Clunky approaches to these topics can mean romance, consensual seduction, courtship and trust may suffer, and teenagers will tune out.

Relationships education involves discussions around communication skills and empathy. Consent is only one small part of a complex picture. Shutterstock

Consent education only starts with “consent”. There’s a bigger picture involving sex-positive concepts such as practising empathy, building healthy relationships, communication skills, discussing sex outside the notions of reproduction and managing emotions.

Many said quality sex education depends on the teacher. But the schools that offer consent education generally have no mandatory training for those who teach it.

Making sure important parts of sex ed aren’t skipped over

After a public consultation period in 2021, the Australian Curriculum Assessment reviewed the Australian curriculum, judging it to be overcrowded.

Given this, all the trickier aspects of relationships and sexuality education are more likely to be skipped over or omitted. This is more likely if a teacher feels uncomfortable, rushed, or lacking in appropriate skills and knowledge.

Any curriculum change should be accompanied by an auditing process. Consent education should balance the safety perspective with the positive and realistic aspects of relationships and sex and be included in the curriculum up to year 12. This ideally would include government mandated support and training for teachers, based in sex-positivity.

It’s also important to consider that education around consent, relationships and sexuality doesn’t end at school. There still need to be conversations at home where individual family beliefs and values can be discussed.


Read more: Parents, your kids are watching you. Sex education begins at home


Mandatory consent education in Australia is a huge win. But this significant step is just one of the many needed to educate thoughtful, compassionate, caring humans while improving general well-being and reducing widespread discrimination – as well as the risk and incidence of sexual assault.

If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, you can call 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) or visit Reach Out

The Conversation

Giselle Natassia Woodley is part of the Australian Research Council's Discovery Project funding scheme (project DP190102435). The views expressed here are those of the authors and not necessarily the Australian government or the ARC. Giselle is also part of a not-for-profit Relationships and Sexual education advocacy group, Bloom-Ed, whose views are not expressed here.

Carmen Jacques is part of the Australian Research Council's Discovery Project funding scheme (project DP190102435). The views expressed here are those of the authors and not necessarily of the Australian government or the ARC.

Kelly Jaunzems is part of the Australian Research Council's Discovery Project funding scheme (project DP190102435). The views expressed here are those of the authors and not necessarily of the Australian government or the ARC.

Lelia Green is part of the Australian Research Council's Discovery Project funding scheme (project DP190102435). The views expressed here are those of the authors and not necessarily of the Australian government or the ARC.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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