All About Us: Living and Growing

All About Us: Living and Growing is a British Sex and Relationships Education series for 5–13 year olds published by Channel 4 on VHS and DVD. The series is often referred to by its short name of Living and Growing. It covers the differences between a boy and a girl, Puberty, how babies are made and how babies are born. The programmes were put into units 1, 2, 3 and 4.

In the first three units the programme includes gently introducing sex education to younger children, through puberty and birth, to media images, same-sex relationships and teenage pregnancy. The fourth unit covers puberty and body image in more detail with a focus on maintaining a healthy mind and body

Unit 1 - Age 5-7 Differences | How did I get here? | Growing up

Unit 2 - Age 7-9 Changes | How babies are made | How babies are born

Unit 3 - Age 9-11 Girl talk | Boy talk | Let's talk about sex

Unit 4 - Age 11-13 Puberty | Body image | Making the right choices

As of July 7, 2012, the DVDs were removed from the Channel 4 product catalogue as a result of the Government’s announcement that the PSHE curriculum is under review. The Alternative version, featuring the first three units, was released in 2013 as the review had not taken place.[1]

In the Alternative version Girl Talk and Boy Talk were moved to Unit 2 which now focuses mainly on puberty. How babies are made and How babies are born took their place in Unit 3 and the Let's talk about sex episode was dropped.

Controversy

The program has come under scrutiny by parents because of its graphic depictions of sexual intercourse and foreplay in Unit 2, in which, among other scenes, it "shows a naked cartoon couple pillow fighting before having sexual intercourse in several positions, as a narrator describes sex and its physical changes as "fun and very exciting".[2] Although the Alternative version removed some of more explicit content concerns have still been expressed and it has been noted that the worksheets remain unchanged and the original DVDs were not recalled.[3]

References

  1. "Alternative version listing". Channel 4 Shop. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
  2. Gilbert, Kathleen (2011-07-08) Graphic sex-ed program for kids can stay in compulsory science classes: UK official, Lifesitenews.com
  3. "Alternative version review". Society for the Protection of Unborn Children. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
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