Integration of sex ed in elementary, high school curricula vital

Education undersecretary Annalyn Sevilla

MANILA – The Department of Education (DepEd) on Thursday underscored the importance of integrating sex education lessons in public elementary and high schools to curb the incidences of teenage pregnancy, population growth and sexual diseases.

Education undersecretary Annalyn Sevilla said DepEd is working on the updates and improvement of policy guidelines on the implementation of the Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) integrated with subjects and extra-curricular activities.

“We want it integrated with existing subjects, as well as in the different activities we do in school,” Sevilla said.

On July 13 last year, DepEd issued the CSE policy guidelines that aim to ensure that learners receive comprehensive and appropriate information that can advance gender equality and empowerment.

Teachers, school principals, and other education stakeholders are expected to make teaching and learning more relevant, meaningful and useful to learners through the policy guidelines.

The topics would be integrated in such learning areas as Araling Panlipunan, Physical Education and Health, Science, and Personal Development.

“For example, we know that body parts are included in science. But here, we will integrate the concept of privacy, harassment, and good relationship. So, values education comes in,” Sevilla said.

Commission on Population deputy director Lolito Tacardon attributed population growth to three factors: fertility, mortality, and migration.

Tacardon said the Philippines’ fertility rate is much higher than the other two factors, hence, the country’s increasing population.

“Around 2 million is added to us every year based on our current population growth rate at 1.7 and when you translate this to simple arithmetic, this is three children per minute so around 4,000 per day, are added to us,” he said.

Lack of awareness about the right method of family planning among many Filipinos is another contributing factor to the issue, he added.

“At the moment, we’re happy that the president approved the intensified implementation of the National Program on Family Planning,” Tacardon said.

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority’s National Demographic and Health Survey in 2017, 9 percent of women aged 15 to 19 years have begun childbearing, 7 percent have had a live birth and 2 percent were pregnant.

The proportion of teenagers who have begun childbearing rises rapidly with age, from 1 percent at age 15 years to 22 percent at age 19 years.

Rural teenagers start childbearing slightly earlier than urban teenagers, at 10 percent and 7 percent, respectively. (PNA)

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