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| Students browse through new sex education reading material at Wat Phnom High School in Phnom Penh last week. HONG MENEA |
Mon, 28 October 2013
Laignee Barron
Cambodians don’t like to talk about sex – or at least that’s
what NGOs sometimes find when broaching cultural taboos and gender barriers to
teach sexual and reproductive health.
“It is often surprising for [the students], because they
have not seen these kinds of pictures before, and they are shy and don’t feel
comfortable with the topic,” said Neat Thirith, who trains peer-to-peer sexual
health educators at the Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development
(ACTED).
In the book Thirith uses to train both females and males in
a sort of crash course on sexual health, the condom on the banana stunt is
foregone for explicit pictures of sexually transmitted disease symptoms, both
genders’ reproductive anatomy and different forms of contraceptives and how to use
them.
“At school, I didn’t learn all this, because when I was at
school, this topic was not integrated into the curriculum,” Thirith said.
Not much has changed. Though sexual health education has
been a part of the national curriculum since 1998 when HIV/AIDs prevention was
taught under the umbrella of health education, the subject is still rare in the
classroom.
In upper secondary school (grades 10-12), sexual health
education is often roped into biology, where cursory lectures limit information
to physiognomy and anatomy.
But the majority of students drop out before even that
rudimentary lecture, as only about 40 per cent of students finish grade nine.
Earlier this month, the Ministry of Education, Youth and
Sport unveiled a new comprehensive sexual and reproductive health curriculum
for grades five through 11, but the majority of the kingdom’s three million
students still do not have access to sexual and reproductive health classes in
school – the new curriculum is only being implemented in five out of 24
provinces.
“According to data from the Ministry of Education, only one
in three schools teach sexual and reproductive health. . . but it’s crucial for
youth to know about this subject,” said Dr Kaing Sophal, program manager at
ACTED.
Though the Ministry of Education has dedicated 7.6 billion
riel, ($1.9 million) to the development of sexual and reproductive health
education and HIV/AIDS awareness, officials blame the limited implementation on
a lack of funds.
“It’s a big challenge for the ministry. We have only a
limited budget to print the new curriculum, and we need to train teachers in
how to teach this subject,” Minister of Education, Youth and Sport Yung
Kunthearith said.
It may not help that the new sexual health curriculum, which
was developed in conjunction with UNESCO and UNFPA, will not be taught as its
own subject but rather rolled in to an already packed school day. Further, the
ministry advises that the more than 200-page manual, which is supposed to
spread over two school years, be taught for just 11 hours each year.
“While the Ministry of Education’s sexual health curriculum
has the potential to increase the quality and frequency of sexual health
education throughout Cambodia, the success of this initiative is severely
limited by the lack of implementation of the curriculum,” Nuon Sidara, SOGI
program coordinator at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, said.
”Without concrete efforts by the government – and
specifically by the Ministry of Education – to ensure that teachers throughout
the country are made aware of the curriculum and fully understand how to
implement it in the classroom, it is unlikely that the curriculum will have any
impact on the ground.”
But educators and NGO workers insist the government can
overcome the challenges posed by the taboo subject.
“From a young age, [students] will experiment and find what
they want to know about sex,” Van Dararithy, a sexual and reproductive health
teacher in Phnom Penh, said.
“But I strongly believe we need to give them the knowledge
to protect themselves from sexual violence and disease.”
Educators insist that implementing a successful sexual
health curriculum has become doubly important in the wake of a United Nations
report released last month that found shockingly high rates of sexual abuse,
particularly among youth.
According to the report, one in five men in Cambodia has
committed rape. Nearly 16 per cent committed the crime while under the age of
15 while more than half were younger than 20.
The study found a correlation between level of education and
sexual violence.
“Men who had no high school education were 1.3 times more
likely to use partner violence than those who had a high school education or
more,” the report states.
Educators and officials say the classroom can be an integral
first step in undermining unequal gender relations that contribute to sexual
violence.
But so far the new curriculum isn’t promising any watershed
moment.
“It’s just compulsory on paper, but in practice, it’s still
not implemented,” ACTED’s Sophal said.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY SEN DAVID AND AMELIA WOODSIDE

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