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Deadly silence: barriers to
communicating HIV/AIDS in schools
An estimated 11.8
million 15 to 24-year-olds are living with HIV worldwide. Schools are
the obvious place to teach young people about the risks of infection.
But what is the best way to do this? Research by ActionAid identifies a
number of silences in communication which are hindering efforts in the
classroom.
Donors,
governments and civil society quickly saw the potential of school-based
sexual reproductive health education in the fight against HIV. Lessons
on HIV/AIDS prevention have been incorporated into education systems in
the vast majority of resource-poor countries. ActionAid’s study
investigated how schools in Tamil Nadu, India, and Nyanza, Kenya,
implement their state-sponsored HIV/AIDS curriculum. It tackled several
questions:
What is the
parental and community demand for school-based HIV/AIDS education?
What role do
schools have in teaching young people about HIV?
How is HIV/AIDS
education being taught in the classroom?
What difficulties
affect the delivery of school-based HIV/AIDS education?
Researchers sought
the attitudes of 3706 teachers, pupils, parents and other key
stakeholders. They found that teachers and schools play a key role in
teaching young people about HIV and AIDS in both countries. Young people
and their parents view the school as a trusted place to learn about HIV,
believing HIV to be a serious problem. 87% of Indian teachers and 90% of
Kenyan teachers feel that their profession has a responsibility to teach
young people about HIV and AIDS. But their efforts are undermined by:
perceived parental
disapproval
religious barriers
(particularly in Kenya)
underlying
attitudes that HIV only happens to ‘them’ and not ‘us’
social and
cultural restraints in discussing HIV/AIDS, sexual relations and power
inequalities, leading to a ‘paradox of safer sex’
the wider crisis
in education, including huge classes, packed curricula and a lack of
training opportunities and learning materials
large numbers of
out-of-school children who will not be reached by school-based
HIV/AIDS education.
The result is often
‘selective teaching’ which either leaves out entire lessons on HIV
altogether or sticks to overly-scientific discussions without direct
reference to sex or sexual relationships. Selective teaching creates
silences in communication around condoms and often lessons rely on
abstinence only messages, thus failing to reach the many young people
who are already sexually active. The researchers also emphasise that the
success of HIV education is unlikely to improve without dramatic
improvements to underlying education systems. This will require a
massive injection of financial resources at every level. Other
recommendations include:
targeting all
sectors of society including religious leaders, the media and
families, promoting open positive and accurate communication on HIV
taking advantage
of pre-existing systems of knowledge transfer
moving away from
an overly scientific approach to HIV/AIDS education
creating
locally-driven learning materials that help children to understand the
human side of HIV
focussing on power
and communication issues in wider human relationships.
Contributor(s):
Tania
Boler, Amina Ibrahim, Ranjin Adoss and Margaret Shaw
Source(s):
‘The sound of silence: difficulties in communicating on HIV/AIDS in
schools’, London: ActionAid, by T. Boler, A. Ibrahim, R. Adoss and M.
Shaw, 2003
Funded by: ActionAid
id21 Research
Highlight: 6 August 2003
Further Information:
Tania Boler
Education and HIV
Adviser
ActionAid
Hamlyn House
Macdonald Road
London N19 5PG
UK