The school workshops I run have shown me that damaging attitudes towards sex, gender and equality start early

Recently, I delivered a healthy relationships workshop at a primary school. We started by playing a drama game, where we asked the children to pretend to be different types of people. A superhero? Lots of air-punches. What about a girl? The girls laughed awkwardly, while the boys pouted, pretended to cry, and fell to the floor.

“Why are you down there,” I asked the boy nearest me. He beamed, and said: “Cos girls are scaredy-cats and they, like, faint and stuff.” “OK,” said my co-facilitator, “how do the girls in the room feel about that?” A pause. Shuffling. One girl eventually volunteered: “It makes me feel sad. And it’s not fair. We’re not all the same.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Future of Wilko staff in limbo as deadline for rescue bid passes

Collapsed budget retailer’s 12,500 workers wait to hear whether buyer emerged by…

Moldova facing ‘very dangerous moment’ amid fears it could be drawn into Ukraine war

Government warns unnamed forces are stoking tensions in Russian-speaking breakaway region of…

Sunak no longer the Tory antidote to Johnson’s leadership chaos

Analysis: chancellor’s woes have considerably thinned the field of potential candidates to…

Surf’s up: a watershed moment for boarders at the Tokyo Games

Forty competitors will paddle out into Tsurigasaki Beach on the morning of…