Comprehensive Sexuality Education

1. Context and background

2. Terminology

3. Laws and policies

4. Governance

5. Monitoring and reporting

 

1. Context and background

Botswana is a land-locked southern African country with a youth population that constitutes about half of the population. It is one of the most sparsely populated countries in the world, only one-tenth of the population living in the capital, Gaborone. The period of free, compulsory education is ten years. Botswana has a very high rate of primary school enrolment and one of the highest adult literacy rates in the southern African region. HIV is a national concern as Botswana has one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world. According to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), in 2020, the HIV prevalence rate was estimated to be about one-fifth of the adult population. As a result of government efforts, Botswana has made steady progress in the area of sexual and reproductive health (SRH). In the past decade, the HIV prevalence rate has been steadily decreasing alongside the maternal mortality rate. Meanwhile, levels of comprehensive knowledge on HIV and contraception have been improving.  

A 2011 study by the Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality found that over-two thirds of Standard 6 pupils lacked the minimal knowledge about HIV that is required for protecting and promoting health. Since then, Botswana has developed one of the more progressive anti-HIV programmes on the African continent. Efforts have been made to integrate life-skills and sexuality education into the curriculum. Students are taught about HIV from the primary school level.

 

2. Terminology

Specific definitions were not found. However, Botswana uses the terms ‘life-skills education’ and ‘HIV & AIDS education’ to describe programmes containing elements of sexuality education. These terms can be found in the Revised National Youth Policy 2010 and the 1998 National HIV & AIDS Policy.

 

3. Laws and policies
 

3.1. Relevant international/regional agreements to which the country is a signatory

INTERNATIONAL 

 

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) 

Ratified in 1996 

Acknowledges the need to guarantee sexuality education free from discrimination and stereotypes, conveying gender equality values. 

Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) 

Ratified in 1995 

Commits to the right to access appropriate health-related information. 

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) 

Ratified in 2021 

Commits to the highest attainable standard of health for persons with disabilities. 

International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 

Not ratified 

Acknowledges that the right to sexual and reproductive health is an integral part of the right to health. 

UNESCO Convention against Discrimination in Education 

Not ratified 

Reaffirms that education is a human right. It highlights states obligations to ensure free and compulsory education, bans any form of discrimination and promotes equality of educational opportunity. 

The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Programme of Action 

Attended the conference 

Calls for sexuality education, counselling and support mechanisms for adolescents, and identifies essential topics. 

UN General Assembly 2016 Political Declaration 

on HIV and AIDS 

Includes commitments and calls to scale up and/or attention to scientifically accurate age- and culturally appropriate comprehensive sexuality education. 

Commission on the Status of Women 2016 Resolution on Women, the Girl Child and HIV and AIDS 

Includes commitments to make universally accessible and available quality comprehensive sexual and reproductive health-care services, commodities, information and education. 

REGIONAL 

 

Ministerial Commitment on comprehensive sexuality education and sexual and reproductive health services for adolescents and young people in Eastern and Southern African (ESA) 
Included  

Commits to ensuring comprehensive sexuality education and sexual and reproductive health services for young people. 

 

3.2. Relevant national laws and policies mandating comprehensive sexuality education

The 1966 Education Act provides the legal framework for the development of education in Botswana. The 1977 National Education Policy and the 1994 Revised National Policy on Education aimed to expand access to education for all, prioritizing primary-school level education. In terms of the policies, students should exit the ten-year free and compulsory education programme with ‘a good knowledge and practice of moral standards and health practices that will prepare them for responsible family and community life.’  

The 1998 National HIV & AIDS Policy calls for information, education and communication ‘to form the basis for changes of social and sexual norms, values and behaviours which facilitate the spread of HIV in the population.’ It confers on the education sector the responsibility for the integration of HIV education into the curriculum and to provide health services for students living with HIV. The policy also highlights the promotion of gender equality in all spheres of national and community life. 

The Botswana Education and Training Sector Strategic Plan (ETSSP 2015-2020) includes cross-cutting issues that are embedded in curricula such as gender and HIV. Specifically, the ETSSP aims to support teachers through capacity-building programmes that address HIV prevention through life-skills education for teachers at both pre-service and in-service stages of a teacher’s career.  

The Revised National Youth Policy 2010 includes strategies such as ‘involv[ing] vulnerable groups in Adolescent Sexual Reproductive Health Programmes’ and ‘mainstreaming adolescent sexual reproductive health and HIV prevention into youth life-skills programmes and education.’ The policy also calls for the development of comprehensive youth and health empowerment programmes. In the related 2010-2016 National Youth Action Plan, action steps include: accelerating the establishment and sustaining of the network of youth-friendly health facilities; and creating livelihood programmes, peer education programmes, and information, education and communication (IEC) materials on adolescent SRH and HIV.  

The AIDS Policy for the Education Sector makes provisions for the prevention of HIV transmission and confirms that comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) will be incorporated into the teachers’ curricula. Relatedly, the HIV & AIDS Strategic Framework (2011-2016) requires that CSE be provided from pre-school to higher education and teacher education. Certain emphasis is put on the integration of sexuality education and life-skills education into teacher education programmes. 

Botswana also has other relevant policies such as the 1999 School Health Policy and Procedures Manual, 2015-2020 National School Health Implementation Strategy, the 2010-2016 Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Implementation Strategy, the 2010 National Population Policy, the 2004 Sexual and Reproductive Health Policy, and the Botswana Multi Sectoral Strategy for the Prevention and Control of  Non-Communicable Diseases 2018-2023.

 

3.3. Curricula


Mandatory or optional

HIV education and related sexuality education is a compulsory part of the curriculum.

Model of delivery

There are two teaching periods a week for the delivery of life-skills education in Botswana. Life-skills education is integrated into subjects across the syllabus. Aspects of sexuality education are also offered through extracurricular clubs or programmes to reinforce what is being taught in school.

Comprehensiveness of content

According to the Primary School Programme, when students exit the programme they should have developed awareness of their rights and responsibilities related to health, gender, law, violence, identity, and civic and other social and moral issues. In the Skills for Life Usage Guidelines for the primary level, components of life-skills education and HIV education are integrated into different subjects. For example, in environmental sciences, students may learn about how diseases spread; in science, students may be asked to discuss the risk of having multiple sexual partners; and in language classes, students learn about relationships and family. 

In the Skills for Life Usage Guidelines for the junior and senior secondary level, topics such as healthy living, communication, risky decisions, likes and dislikes, stress, puberty, alcohol and drug use are integrated into other curriculum subjects. In science, students discuss puberty, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and HIV in more detail. When students exit the two-year senior secondary programme, they should have ‘acquired knowledge, attitudes and practices that will ensure good family and health practices including awareness and management of epidemics (such as HIV & AIDS) that prepare them for productive life.’

Learning resources

Botswana's Education Development Centre has developed materials called ‘Living: Skills for Life/ Botswana's Window of Hope (2010)’ to support the teaching of sexuality education, life-skills education, and HIV education. The materials were created in collaboration with local teachers and were designed to provide interactive and culturally sensitive HIV education. The materials aim to address the gaps in the curriculum by providing guidance on managing difficult conversations, probing responses, and providing sufficient facts and evidence to support assertions. The materials are intended to facilitate open-ended conversations and ensure that the primary message of the lesson is not missed.

 

3.4. Teachers

Teacher preparedness and capacity building: Information was not found. 

Whether teachers are mandated to be trained on provision/delivery of sexuality education either as part of PRESET or INSET: Sexuality education is offered for pre-service teacher training and in-service teacher training. According to a 2015 study by UNESCO: Comprehensive Sexuality Education in Teacher Training in Eastern and Southern Africa, topics covered in pre-service training in Botswana include gender issues, HIV, stigma and discrimination, and counselling. According to the Living: Skills for Life/ Botswana's Window of Hope (2005) guidance document, teachers in each school are trained through a hierarchical training system. Master trainers are trained directly by project officers and at the primary level, master trainers train selected teachers from all schools in their inspectorate areas. The trainers of trainers are then responsible for training all teachers in their schools. Trainers provide ongoing support to teachers in their school and region through refresher sessions and consultations. A training manual for the Living Programme is also available.

 

3.5. Schools

Access to school-based health services, including SRH: According to the 1998 National HIV & AIDs Policy, the Ministry of Education must ensure that other services related to HIV and STI control and care are accessible to students in need.

 

4. Governance
 

4.1 Responsible ministries

The Ministry of Education and Skills Development is responsible for managing the compulsory education system. According to the 1998 National HIV & AIDS Policy, the Ministry of Education is responsible for the ‘integration of AIDS and STI education into all levels and institutions of education, starting at primary school level, and extending to tertiary, teacher training and non-formal institutions.’ 

Other relevant departments include the Department of Information and Broadcasting, which also plays a role in disseminating information and education on HIV and STIs; and the Ministry of Labour, as well as Home Affairs and Social Welfare, which develops and implements AIDS prevention programmes for populations outside the compulsory education system. Furthermore, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), International Organizations (IOs), and the private sector also have a role to play in sexuality education.


4.2. Level of responsibility/decentralization and autonomy

No information was found.


4.3. Government budget allocation

No information was found.

 

5. Monitoring and reporting

Botswana has a system of continuous assessment. The monitoring of the ‘Living: Skills for Life/ Botswana's Window of Hope (2005)’ is conducted by the Ministry of Education and Skills Development. The guidance document consists of a ‘teacher on-going monitoring tool’ which can be used to track the implementation of the Living Programme materials and shared with deputy school heads and education officers.

 

Last modified:

Thu, 31/10/2024 - 21:56

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