Please note: Much of the information on this page reiterates the information in our School Policy on RSE.
The DfE guidance states that “children and young people need to know how to be safe and healthy, and how to manage their academic, personal and social lives in a positive way”. It is about the development of the pupil’s knowledge and understanding of her or him as a sexual being, about what it means to be fully human, called to live in right relationships with self and others and being enabled to make moral decisions in conscience. In Secondary schools RSE should “give young people the information they need to help them develop healthy, nurturing relationships of all kinds, not just intimate relationships. It should enable them to know what a healthy relationship looks like and what makes a good friend, a good colleague and a successful marriage or other type of committed relationship. It should also cover contraception, developing intimate relationships and resisting pressure to have sex (and not applying pressure).”
We are legally required to teach those aspects of RSE which are statutory parts of National Curriculum Science. (There is also a separate requirement for maintained secondary schools to teach about HIV, AIDS and sexually transmitted infections. This does not apply to academies).
However, the reasons for our inclusion of RSE go further.
Our approach to RSE is rooted in the Catholic Church’s teaching of the human person and presented in a positive framework of Christian ideals. At the heart of the Christian life is the Trinity; Father, Son and Spirit in communion, united in loving relationship and embracing all people and all creation. As a consequence of the Christian belief that we are made in the image and likeness of God, gender and sexuality are seen as God’s gift, reflect God’s beauty, and share in the divine creativity.
RSE, therefore, will be placed firmly within the context of relationship as it is there that sexuality grows and develops. Following the guidance of the Bishops of England and Wales and as advocated by the DFE (and the Welsh Assembly Government) RSE will be firmly embedded in the PSHE framework as it is concerned with nurturing human wholeness and integral to the physical, spiritual, emotional, moral, social and intellectual development of pupils.
It is centred on Christ’s vision of being human as good news and will be positive and prudent, showing the potential for development, while enabling the dangers and risks involved to be understood and appreciated. All RSE will be in accordance with the Church’s moral teaching. It will emphasise the central importance of marriage and the family whilst acknowledging that all pupils have a fundamental right to have their life respected whatever household they come from. It will also prepare pupils for life in modern Britain.
RSE covers a wide range of topics. To read the content secondary schools are expected to cover in RSE, you can read the Department for Education’s full guidance here (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/relationships-education-relationships-and-sex-education-rse-and-health-education/relationships-and-sex-education-rse-secondary)
The government guidance makes clear that “effective RSE does not encourage early sexual experimentation”, and is instead focused on empowering students through equipping them with the information and knowledge needed to make healthy and safe choices in their future relationships. It is also important to note that whilst intimate relationships are a part of RSE, RSE covers all kinds of relationships - including families, friendships, and relationships with colleagues.
Some RSE content will be delivered through personal development days - for more information on these, please visit the page entitled "Personal Development Days".
In addition to targeted RSE sessions, some RSE content is covered by curriculum subjects. Please visit the page entitled "PSHE & Citizenship in the Curriculum" to view the PSHCE Curriculum Map and view the Relationships & Sex tab to see how subjects cover content related to RSE at KS3, KS4, and KS5.
Below are examples of the sessions which KS3 will partake in in their Personal Development Days. The sessions below include "What changes during puberty?" for Years 7&8, and "What is consent and why is it important?" for Year 9.
Students will cover a significant amount of RSE content through their Biology lessons in Science. Below, you can find a list of all the RSE related topics covered in science lessons (please use the tabs at the bottom of the document to toggle between content delivered at KS3 & Ks4).