Quebec educators resist being rushed into teaching sex ed - Action News
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Quebec educators resist being rushed into teaching sex ed

Teachers in Quebec say they're being rushed into offering sex education courses for students from kindergarten through high school without proper training or support.

Teachers unions write Premier Philippe Couillard, asking him to delay launch of sex ed course

Sex ed written on a chalkboard
Education Minister Dustin Duncan said school boards must immediately pause their involvement with third party organizations who provide sexual health education, such as the ARC Foundation and the SOGI 123 program. (CBC News)

Teachers in Quebec say they're being rushed intoofferingsex-educationcoursesfor students from kindergarten throughhigh school without proper training or support.

Unions representing three-quarters of the province's 100,000 teachers have written directly to Premier Philippe Couillard, asking him to delay the launch of the mandatory courses, nowset for next September.

SbastienJoly, head of the Quebec Provincial Teachers Association, which represents teachers in the anglophone sector,told CBCNews that teachers support the idea of teaching sex ed in schoolsand have been lobbying for it for years.

But he said this course isbeing rushed through.

"We believe these contents are extremely importantand delicate, and we need to take the time to ensure there will be proper implementation," Joly said.

Pilot program launched 3years ago

Quebec abandoned sex education in public schools a decade ago.

It was reintroducedasa pilot program in200 schools three years ago.

Last December, Couillard and his education minister, Sbastien Proulx, announced the province was expanding the program across the province.

Every Quebec elementary and high school student is to receive mandatory sex education, integrated into current classes, as of next September.

About a million students will receiveage-appropriate information on sexuality, anatomy, body image, social roles, sexual assault, sexual relations, stereotypes andsexually transmitted diseases, among other topics.

Too much too soon

Joly said the pilot program raised several red flags that the Education Ministryhasn't addressed.

He said schools and teachers begin planning for the next school year months agoand that teachers have received little guidance on who will be required to teach the materialor precisely how it will be integrated into other courses.
Sbastien Joly, president of the Quebec Provincial Association of Teachers, told CBC that teachers support the reintroduction of sex ed in schools but that they need support and training to take on this 'delicate' subject. (CBC)

"Will it be phys-ed teachers, as part of their health section?Will it be science teachers?Will it be other teachers?" Joly asked. "It is left to the school to determine."

He said some schools have asked for teachers who would feel comfortable teaching such material to volunteer, but he said many of his union's members are reluctant to do that.

"Ultimately, you will have people who will be ill-prepared and [on]whom it will be imposed to teach the content," he said.

Joly said teachers feel the subject is too important to rush through.

"What if a student comes forward saying they've been sexually abused at home? How do you react as a teacher who's been trained to teach French or math or English?" he asked.

The unions are urging Couillard to delay launching the course province-wide and to meet with them to discuss the issue.

Couillard and Proulx are currently on a trade mission in Europe and didn't comment on the letter Thursday.

Proulx's office told Radio-Canada that teachers will be well-prepared, and the course will launch as scheduled next September.