We need to educate children from an early age about gender equality

White Ribbon UK is one of the signatories to a letter to the Education Secretary, Gavin Williamson, about the importance of tackling gender stereotypes as an early intervention to ending violence against women and girls.


May 2021

Dear Gavin Williamson,

Early intervention necessary to prevent violence against women and girls

No woman or girl should be – or feel – unsafe. As organisations and individuals working in the fields of gender equality, violence against women and education, we are acutely aware of the violence and harassment that many women and girls face on a daily basis. The link between gender stereotyping and a range of unequal and unacceptable outcomes, including male violence against women and girls, is clear and established.

We are convinced, based on a range of compelling evidence, that educating children about gender equality from an early age is an essential part of the solution. Children grow up surrounded by gender stereotypes – at home, in school and in the wider world – which send them strong messages about how girls and boys, women and men, should look and behave. This happens at a critical stage in children’s learning about the world and their place in it, with gendered attitudes ingrained in children from around the age of 10. Any strategy that fails to recognise this link and the need for early intervention is setting itself up for failure.

Schools are a key part of any systemic response. Despite the best efforts of many educators, stereotyping is reinforced daily in the school environment. The curriculum, books, displays, language and assumptions perpetuate notions of active men and passive women, of ‘strong’ boys who should stifle their emotions and caring girls whose role is to please others. Girls are aware from all too young of how their bodies are judged and valued. Boys, in turn, often feel pressure to define themselves as ‘men’ by conforming to outdated ideals of masculinity. These learnt dynamics lead to a range of unequal outcomes throughout life, fuelling male violence against women and girls, high rates of male suicide and limiting children’s aspirations along gender lines. The recent spotlight on sexual harassment and sexual violence in schools confirms pre-existing evidence showing these to be prolific. These outcomes are deeply unfair to all children.

By challenging gender stereotypes, we can reduce the harms caused by violence against women and girls, which causes such a vast human cost, as well as the £66bn domestic abuse alone is estimated to cost society each year. We can also improve a range of other outcomes, including closing the gender gap in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths fields, improving boys’ reading, bringing down male suicide rates and increasing children’s wellbeing.

The Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence (Istanbul Convention), recognises the key role that education plays in combating the underlying causes of gender-based violence, providing that all levels of education should include teaching on equality, non-stereotyped gender roles and gender-based violence against women.

A full roll out of the new Relationships and Sex Education curriculum in summer 2021 must be prioritised, with no further delays. However, in order for schools to be part of the systemic response, all those bodies with responsibility for the content, quality and delivery of children’s education have a role to play. We therefore call on the Government to implement the following as a matter of urgency:

  • Make actively challenging gender stereotypes integral to 0-11s education practice.

  • To work constructively with experts, the specialist women’s support sector and organisations in the field of gender equality in education to ensure that the necessary resources and training are made available to schools, building on the existing research and small-scale work already happening with proven impact and providing funding for this work.

This will not be a quick fix, but we have to start right now so that outcomes improve for the next generation.

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