ABSTRACT
The content of comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) programmes is contested in many parts of the world, yet we know less about what primary beneficiaries (learners) consider as (in) appropriate school curriculum. I examined this phenomenon in Ghana. Data generated from focus group discussions suggests that, overall, participants used positive phrases to describe the need for sexuality education. The prevalent and recurrent needs of adolescents centred around personal reproductive health hygiene, pregnancy prevention, healthy relationships, reproductive infections and control, reproductive physiology and maturation, gender differences and sexual orientations, and sexual pleasure and pain. However, these needs varied in some ways between males and females and between early adolescents and older adolescents. The study shows that what adolescents seek to learn fall within international norms/standards on CSE. However, some of these concepts were not covered in the guidelines proposed for Ghana. The prevalent view among many opponents that CSE is not driven by local need may not be consistent with adolescents’ own aspirations and realities. The voices of children and adolescents should constitute part of the discussions on the form and content of sexuality education.
Acknowledgements
I wish to express my profound gratitude to the three anonymous reviewers, the managing editor, and editor-in-chief for the many helpful and intellectually stimulating feedback/comments on the various drafts of the manuscript.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).