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Young children 'learn homophobia'
Primary school children are using homophobic insults
without realising it, paving the way for later bullying, an
educationalist has warned. Mark Jennett said teachers should not allow
words like "gay" and "sissy" to be used as terms of abuse. The terms
made it harder for them to accept homosexuality when they later learnt
what it meant, he added. Mr Jennett told an anti-bullying conference in
London that schools should log all homophobic insults.
'A bad thing'
The comments come after BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris
Moyles was criticised by some groups for his derogatory use of the word
"gay" on air. But the corporation said employing the term as he did to
mean "lame" or "rubbish" was widespread among young people and he had
"meant no offence".
Speaking at the London conference, organised by the
NASUWT teachers' union, Mr Jennett said: "It does matter if we are
saying that homosexuality is a bad thing. "If they were using the word
'girl' or 'Muslim' in a derogatory way we would challenge it and that
would be the right thing to do." Mr Jennett said figures showed 81% of
primary school pupils identified the use of the word "gay" as "a means
of attacking or making fun of someone". He added: "By the time they find
out that it means to be homosexual, they have already learnt that it
means something bad."
On average, girls who find out that they are lesbian
do not reveal this to anyone for three years, for fear of abuse or
ridicule, Mr Jennett said. Some schools had asked homosexual pupils to
leave as they were unable to cope with homophobic bullying. Schools in
England are required to draw up an anti-bullying policy.
Teachers' words
Mr Jennett said homophobia should be
explicitly included in all. But some staff were also guilty of using
insulting terms without realising it. He said: "A lot of teachers say
words like 'sissy' without thinking about it. One PE teacher I saw asked
a group of pupils 'What's this, boys? A mothers' meeting?'"
Some local authorities in London are piloting a log
book for all reported homophobic incidents, which Mr Jennett said should
be extended to all schools, including primaries. He said: "We should
talk about sexuality, not sex: things like people's family lives.
Primary school children are very strong on the concept of fairness. We
should tell them just how unfair homophobia is."
A Department for Education and Skills spokesman said:
"Bullying should never be tolerated in our schools, no matter what its
motivation." The Liberal Democrats have launched a campaign to stop
homophobic bullying, with an online petition receiving more than 1,400
signatures. The party's education spokeswoman, Sarah Teather, said:
"Homophobic bullying is an issue for the whole school, not just for a
victimised minority. "This is not a matter of 'political correctness'
but about pupil behaviour and the right of parents to feel confident
that their child will be safe in school."
BBC News
14 June 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/5080108.stm
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