Are Educators Really Suggesting ‘Ethical Porn’ in Sex Ed?

high school students
Share:

A resource that encourages young people to create “ethical porn” with cartoon images and is recommended in recent sex-education guidance has been panned by a family campaigner.

Writing online for The Telegraph, Norman Wells of the Family Education Trust criticizes various resources which were listed as “useful” in sex-education advice produced for schools last month.

The guidance was produced by a number of groups that lobby for sex education to be compulsory in all schools.

Wells says that following the advice “would merely compound the problems associated with the sexualization of children.”

He criticizes a resource pack called “Planet Porn,” which is included in a list of “useful resources” within the non-binding guidance.

Commenting on an activity in the pack called “Porn Debate,” its publishers say it “tries to be even handed and doesn’t attempt to tell people whether porn is good or bad.”

Wells points out that this is “fully consistent” with a “relativistic approach.”

He says parents assume their children will be taught pornography is wrong in school and would be discouraged from viewing it.

“They don’t for one moment think that it will be presented as a topic for discussion, devoid of any moral framework or direction,” he says.

Another activity, called “Porn Challenge,” encourages young people “to think of ways to present sexy scenes and images which are safe, promote equality and diversity and don’t make assumptions about who may be watching porn.”

The activity also involves using cartoon images from the pack or stickmen to create “ethical porn.”

The guidance recommends another resource that tells teachers pornography is not necessarily “all bad” and to bear in mind that it is “hugely diverse.”

The e-magazine, entitled The Pornography Issue, also recommends a youth forum website that tells teenagers “porn can be great” and aims to tackle a series of “myths” on the subject.

Wells says, “There is widespread agreement that the prevalence of pornography in society in general, and on the Internet in particular, presents enormous challenges.”

“However,” he adds, “before we determine that the solution lies in adding pornography education to the school curriculum, we need to ask searching questions about precisely what such lessons would consist of and about the moral framework within which the subject would be addressed.”

Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

93-Year-Old’s Remarkable Vision About Heaven

https://youtu.be/VwgeJspIIlc 93-year-old Doris Sumner’s supernatural experience with God has changed her entire life. Sharing her testimony through Seeking His Presence Ministries, Sumner says this vision started during a time of meditating and reading the Word of God with her husband....

5 Strong Solutions to Protect Your Mind

By Kenza Haddock A recent new mental-health related TikTok trend has gained traction across the app’s approximately 1.5 billion followers, claiming to “help” people overcome the pain of intrusive thoughts. The TikTok trend encourages users to give in to their...

Mandisa’s Celebration of Life Ceremony to be Livestreamed

Christian artist Mandisa Hundley will have her life and legacy celebrated this weekend after her death on Thursday, April 18. As The Tennessean reported, Hundley, more affectionately known as Mandisa by fans, will be celebrated in two different services. The...

Can You Honor Your Parents Without Obeying Them?

By Rabbi Eric Tokajer We live in a broken world filled with broken families—families in which many sons and daughters have been raised to believe in the G-D of the Bible and to be responsible to live by the Ten...

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top