This book offers a deep dive into sex education pedagogy in the Australian context, taking a close look at the language used to teach the key topics of consent and respect. It examines questions students ask, how teachers accommodate different beliefs in their classrooms, and how students learn about more values-based topics including consent, respectful relationships, and gender and sexuality diversity. It also considers what teaching and assessment looks like over the course of a school term and what makes a ‘successful’ student. In short it answers the question – how is sex education actually taught?The Language of Sex Education provides the first book-length treatment of the language of sex education, offering a detailed account of pedagogy from the perspective of Systemic Functional Linguistics. The study is situated in the Australian context, though has broader relevance to places such as New Zealand, North America, and the United Kingdom whose sex education is historically and culturally comparable to that of Australia.The book provides descriptions of the key topics of consent and respect, illustrating how teachers impart technical knowledge and how they support students to adopt and challenge the nuanced values needed when engaging with sex education. It does this through new descriptions of key linguistic resources of technicality and iconization that synthesize the central knowledge and values of the field. Through these descriptions and analyses, this book not only provides a detailed account of sex education pedagogy, but also offers new insights into the role of language in building fields and building communities.
Georgia Carr is a Research Fellow in the School of Literature, Languages and Linguistics at the Australian National University, as well as in the Faculty of Medicine and Health at the University of Sydney, Australia.
List of Figures List of Tables Acknowledgements Part I: What is Sex Education?1. Laws and Values: Sex Education in School 2. The Sex Education ClassroomPart II: Teaching Consent3. Technicalising Consent4. Learning Consent Part III: Teaching Respect5. Iconising Respect 6. Learning Respect Part IV: Learning Values with Knowledge 7. Interpersonal Education: Beyond Ideation ReferencesIndex
Georgia Carr’s volume is an exciting contribution to studies on sex education, with an innovative perspective on what such education looks like in real sex education classrooms and aiming at providing teachers with resources for how best to ‘do’ it. The impact of this systematically researched work will be substantial. In the words of the author in closing her study: “A linguistic description of sex education pedagogy is well positioned […] to contribute to effecting change in classrooms and bedrooms the world over.” Yes, I agree entirely.