Comprehensive Sexuality Education
1. Context and background
Ethiopia is an eastern African country located in the horn of Africa. It is one of the most populated countries in Africa with approximately 130 million residents. About 60% of residents are under the age of 25 and the median age is just 20 years. The median age for women’s first births is also around 20 years’ and on average, every woman gives birth to four children. Adolescent pregnancy rates remain high. Modern contraception use in the country has been slowly increasing, though rates remain low. One-quarter of all women, and just one-tenth of sexually active adolescents, use modern contraception methods. The rate of contraceptive use in Ethiopia is among the lowest in sub-Saharan Africa and unmet family planning needs for adolescent girls among the highest. Ethiopia has a relatively high infant and maternal mortality rate, though there have been significant improvementes in the past decade. Due to concentrated efforts by the government and international organizations, Ethiopia’s HIV rate has decreased significantly in the past few decades and is one of the lowest in the region. According to the 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy, the major sexual and reproductive health (SRH) problems among adolescents and youth include ‘risky sexual practices, child marriage, early childbearing, unintended pregnancy, unsafe abortion and its complications and STIs including HIV.’ Public education in the country is free at the primary level for children aged 7–12 years.
Comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) has increasingly been integrated in adolescent and youth SRH programme interventions. However, levels of comprehensive knowledge on HIV continue to be low. There are many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and other organizations in the country that teach sexuality education to the youth.
2. Terminology
While comprehensive sexuality education(CSE) is not explicitly or formally defined, terms such as ‘sexual education’, ‘AIDS education’, and ‘life-skills education’ are used in policy documents such as: the 2009 Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS, the 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy, and the 2020-2025 Education Sector Development Programme VI.
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) |
Acknowledges the need to guarantee sexuality education free from discrimination and stereotypes, conveying gender equality values. |
|
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) |
Commits to the right to access appropriate health-related information. |
|
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) |
Commits to the highest attainable standard of health for persons with disabilities. |
|
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights |
Acknowledges that the right to sexual and reproductive health is an integral part of the right to health. |
|
UNESCO Convention against Discrimination in Education |
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 |
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 (CSE) and sexual and reproductive health services for adolescents and young people in Eastern and Southern African (ESA) Attended the meeting but has not assented to the commitment
|
Commits to ensuring comprehensive sexuality education and sexual and reproductive health services for young people. The country is not committed to ensuring CSE for young people but commits to providing services to young people relating to SRH, HIV, early and unintended pregnancy , child marriage and gender-based violence. |
3.2. Relevant national laws and policies mandating comprehensive sexuality education
Article 35 of Ethiopias’ Constitution of 1994 guarantees the rights of women. It states that: ‘To prevent harm arising from pregnancy and childbirth and in order to safeguard their health, women have the right of access to family planning education, information and capacity.’ The federal government is obligated to establish and implement national standards and basic policy criteria while the different states are obligated to follow national standards.
While there is no official education law in Ethiopia, legislation has been developed and is expected to be endorsed in the near future. Education is predominantly governed by the Constitution and the 1994 Education and Training Policy. According to the Education and Training Policy, the general education that will be offered will be focused on indigenous knowledge, vocational and academic subjects and ethical education, all supported by appropriated technology.
The objectives of the 2009 Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS objectives are to: ‘mainstream HIV & AIDS information, knowledge, skills, and attitudes into the school curriculum, educational materials, and research’. All learning institutions are required to integrate HIV education into formal/non-formal school curricula and programmes and put in place co-curricular activities which include the development and acquisition of age-appropriate information, knowledge and skills in relation to HIV.
The main aim of the 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy is for the improved health status of Ethiopian adolescents and youth. Health-related goals include: ensuring a greater proportion of adolescents and youth who have comprehensive knowledge of HIV; increasing the contraceptive prevalence rate among female youth; reducing the unintended adolescent pregnancy rate; and increasing the rate of consistent and appropriate condom use among sexually active youth. One of the main areas for action is ‘increasing access to Adolescent Youth Health information and age appropriate CSE and life-skills education.’ Priority action includes the integration of ‘comprehensive life skills, family life, sexuality education and nutrition into in-school, out-of-school, and higher learning programs and training Curricula.’ The most recent strategy for the goal of the period 2021-2025 is to attain full health and well-being of adolescent and youth through ensuring equitable access and utilization of comprehensive health services.
The 2015-2020 Education Sector Development Programme V categorizes HIV & AIDS as a cross-cutting issue in the education sector. It calls for the revision of the curriculum to integrate life skills that will increase awareness of health issues such as HIV, sexual education, and drugs and substance abuse. Delivery of the content is primarily through school clubs, student services and broadcasting local digital content. Strategies in the later 2020-2025 Education Sector Development Programme VI include, to ‘strengthen life skills, HIV/AIDS, sexual and reproductive health (SRH), gender, deworming and drug abuse education’.
3.3. Curricula
Mandatory or optional
The 2009 Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS calls for the mandatory integration of HIV education into formal and non-formal school curricula.
Model of delivery
Components of sexuality education are integrated into the curriculum.
Comprehensiveness of content
The 2009 Curriculum Framework for Ethiopian Education (KG – Grade 12) notes that HIV education should be included throughout the syllabus. It is further discussed in the integrated science curriculum for grades 5 and 6. In the 2020 National Curriculum Framework, reproductive health is only discussed in grades 11 and 12 as part of the natural science stream, within health sciences. Only students who choose to take the health-science-based subjects are assigned 135 minutes a week for reproductive health. For other learners, sexuality education content can be found in cross-cutting themes that are integrated into the curriculum such as gender and inclusive education, hygiene and sanitation, HIV education, and life skills. More specific information on content could not be found.
Learning resources
According to the 2009 Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS, all learning institutions are required to carry age-appropriate instructional materials on HIV awareness and prevention. The materials were not found.
3.4. Teachers
Teacher preparedness and capacity building: Life-skill manuals have been developed on how to integrate HIV, SRH and gender issues into subjects such as biology, civic education and English for grades 9–12. Accordingly, teachers from all the regions and two city administrations have been trained on the manuals to deliver the contents to learners.
Whether teachers are mandated to be trained on provision/delivery of sexuality education either as part of PRESET or INSET: Pre-service teacher training on gender and life skills is mandatory. The Education Sector Policy and Strategy for HIV&AIDS requires that PRESET and INSET teacher education must prepare educators to tackle HIV at the personal and professional levels. It states that: ‘the teacher education curriculum (pre-service and in-service) must prepare educators to respond to HIV and AIDS within their own lives, and as professionals to build positive attitudes and skills for HIV&AIDS prevention and control among all their learners.’ All teachers who complete training at teacher training institutions (TTIs) should acquire expertise in HIV prevention and mitigation through both pre-service and in-service training, and ongoing teacher development programs. HIV education is integrated into cross-cutting subjects such as developmental psychology. The policy explicitly mentions ‘capacity building and continuous professional development’ for education personnel.
3.5. Schools
Access to school-based health services, including SRH: The 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy calls for the ‘establishment of linkages for effective referrals to relevant services for pregnant adolescents.’ The Ministry of Education is further instructed to ‘collaborate with Ministry of Health (MOH) for expanding adolescent and youth-friendly health and nutrition information and services in all university clinics and strengthening health referral systems’.
4. Governance
4.1 Responsible ministries
According to the 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy, both the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education should collaborate to provide access to comprehensive adolescent youth health information and sexuality education. The ministries are to work together in accordance with the Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS, to develop ‘specific guidelines on HIV and AIDS prevention and sex education’. The Ministry of Women and Social Affairs and the Ministry of Labour and Skills are also expected to contribute to these initiatives. For some cross-cutting issues such as HIV, a directorate or coordination unit at the federal level, with similar structures at lower levels participates.
4.2. Level of responsibility/decentralization and autonomy
Information was not found.
4.3. Government budget allocation
The 2021-2025 National Adolescent and Youth Health Strategy budgets for the provision of SRH and HIV health services. Funding is also provided for the adolescent youth health training curriculum and for training packages for skills-based health education, including Education for Health. The strategy budgets for equitable access and the use of comprehensive health services by youth.
5. Monitoring and reporting
According to the Education Sector Policy and Strategy on HIV & AIDS, the existing Education Management Information System (EMIS) incorporates data collection and summarizing tools for HIV and includes measurement indicators for HIV.