Abstract
Overwhelmingly, school-based sexuality education programmes focus on the prevention of infection, pregnancy and abuse, with little if any attention given to positive views of sexuality and rarely the inclusion of sex positive issues such as pleasure, intimacy and desire. This paper explores the experience of teaching about pleasure to pre-service health and physical education teachers as part of compulsory studies in a unit on sexuality education designed to prepare them to teach sexuality education in secondary schools. Drawing on the aims, theoretical framework, content and pedagogical structure of the unit, and data collected from 42, third-year pre-service teachers (PST) in Australia via surveys and student assessment, the paper provides some practical examples of what teaching about pleasure might look like in practice. It argues that with adequate preparation, a framework to celebrate sex and sexuality, a gender lens to examine normative discourses, and the opportunity for reflection, PST can develop the confidence, skill and willingness to include pedagogies of pleasure in their school-based work.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1. By the term framework, I am referring to a set of principles that guide and support, in this case my approach to sexuality education, or the approach taken in my teaching. It is the essential, supporting theoretical and pedagogical structure that can be used regardless of what sexuality education issue is being discussed, taught or researched.
2. Middle school years is a term used in Australia to refer to students in years 5–9, aged 10–15 years.