Sexuality, Gender and Schooling: Shifting Agendas in Social Learning

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 2002 - Education - 244 pages

The sexuality of young people arouses controversy and remains a source of concern for parents, teachers, policy-makers and politicians. But what young people really think about sexuality and gender and how these issues impact upon their lives is often marginalized or overlooked.

Based upon extensive ethnographic research with young people and teachers, Sexuality, Gender and Schooling offers a telling and insightful account of how young people acquire sexual knowledge and how they enact their understanding of their own gender. It highlights the ways in which young people's constructions of gender and sexuality are formed outside the school curriculum, through engagements with various forms of popular culture - such as teen magazines and television programmes - and through same-sex friendship groups.

Offering a fresh perspective on a subject of perennial interest and concern, Sexuality, Gender and Schooling provides accounts from the inside - some of which may challenge and eclipse current approaches to sexuality education. It has significant implications for policy and practice in Personal, Social and Health Education and is also an excellent introduction to key debates and issues in the study of gender and sexuality.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Stop teaching sex education or reconsider your position
8
Just call her ratface
14
Kehily is a bitch
25
Concluding comments
31
Contents
45
the school as a site
52
an analysis of a
73
More Sugar? Teenage magazines gender displays
99
young men heterosexuality
128
teachers pedagogies and sex education
164
notes
200
200
236
73
237
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

Mary Jane Kehily is a lecturer in Childhood Studies at the Open University.