Media release from ASCL and NAHT
Friday 27 October
ASCL and NAHT write to Education Secretary over ‘desperately disappointing’ tone of RSHE comments
Geoff Barton, General Secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, and Paul Whiteman, General Secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, have written to Education Secretary Gillian Keegan today to express their disappointment with the tone of a press release issued by the Department for Education on Monday over Relationships, Sex and Health Education (RSHE) materials and the comments in the press release from the Education Secretary. The letter is as follows:
Rt Hon Gillian Keegan MP
Secretary of State for Education
Sanctuary Buildings
Great Smith Street
London
SW1P 3BT
Friday 27 October 2023
Dear Gillian
We are writing to raise our concerns about the way in which your letter to schools regarding RSHE materials was ‘spun’ into a press release that was clearly designed to give the impression that you are getting tough with recalcitrant schools for failing to provide access to these materials. In reality, we think that the vast majority of schools already share RSHE materials with parents and that if there are examples where this has not happened for any reason, it is in a very small number of cases. This simply isn’t an issue which warrants a press release containing the comment from you: “No ifs, no buts and no more excuses.”
It is desperately disappointing that you as the Secretary State for Education – the very person who should be standing up for schools – instead chooses to denigrate them in pursuit of a headline. This sort of thing undermines public institutions and feeds a breakdown of trust that is corrosive. You are aware that schools are experiencing very difficult conditions in terms of challenging pupil behaviour and high levels of absenteeism. We need political leaders to be encouraging parents to support schools rather than making that relationship more difficult. It is also incredibly hard to recruit and retain enough staff to deliver the curriculum in general, let alone the extra demands of a subject as sensitive as RSHE. Inflaming controversy over RSHE is hardly likely to encourage people into the profession or inspire confidence among teachers who are teaching this subject.
We are making this letter public in order to provide some sort of balance to the press release that you issued – without warning – on Monday. We implore you to think more carefully about the impact of such statements in the future and to be a champion for our schools and colleges.
Yours sincerely
Geoff Barton
General Secretary
Association of School and College Leaders
Paul Whiteman
General Secretary
National Association of Head Teachers
First published 27 October 2023