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Students given breastfeeding lessons with puppets

07:00 AEST Sun Aug 19 2012
MSN NZ
The bizarre puppets used to teach breastfeeding to school children
The bizarre puppets used to teach breastfeeding to school children

Girls as young as 14 are being given breastfeeding lessons as part of a controversial new programme in UK high schools.

Bizarre puppets and knitted breasts were used to teach 40 students at Liverpool's Litherland High School how to breastfeed and express milk.

The girls — aged 14 to 15 years old — were also taught about the nutritional benefits of breastfeeding and why it was superior to bottle feeding.

But the advice sparked outrage in the local community.

Many critics questioned why such young girls needed to know about breastfeeding and said this was yet another example of children being sexualised.

"Teach them how to respect themselves, how to say NO and how to keep their legs closed, along with teaching them to read and write!!" one wrote on the Liverpool Echo website.

Another pointed out that as the age of consent in the UK was 16 and the average age women had their first child was 28, there was no need to teach such young girls mothering techniques.

But others welcomed the move, saying all teens should be taught basic life skills.

"This should be taught alongside other aspects of parenting, budgeting and general life skills," one reader wrote. "Perhaps learning the realities of life will encourage some to wait until they are ready to start a family and break the cycle of bad parenting so many young people are trapped in. After all if you have not been properly parented yourself how can you be expected to know how to care for your own child."

"I don't think that teaching girls how to breastfeed will encourage them to get pregnant, in the same way that teaching them food tech doesn't make them want to cook their own dinner all the time," another wrote. "There is no harm in informing teenagers for the future, especially with something like breastfeeding which tends to be seen as unnecessary and old-fashioned by a lot of young people."

For the young people at Litherland High School, the message that "breast is best" definitely got through.

Teacher Sheila Bradshaw said most of the girls completely changed their opinion on breastfeeding.

"Beforehand only a minority of students said they would consider breastfeeding in the future but by the end of the presentation a significant majority said they would," Bradshaw said.

Is this going too far? Have your say below

User reviews
Kudos to the school in Liverpool offering this in their curriculum! Wish they taught breast feeding here when they teach the rest of sex ed! They demonstrate proper condom techniques, how to insert tampons & what each sexes role is in creating life, they should teach how to sustain that life too!
My toddler is 2 and breastfeeds her dolls because she has seen me breastfeed her little sister. Is she too young to be learning how to breastfeed? We make it normal by teaching women how to do it throughout life. Like learning about the human reproductive process, if they aren't getting it at home, they really need to get it at school. They need to learn it somewhere.
Excellent program! It's about health not breasts. It's similar to being taught to respect your dental health by brushing your teeth. To take care of your over-all health by washing your hands. If this keeps up, you may have a much healthier population, seeing as how breastfeeding is so beneficial to our health, i.e. LOWER risks of obesity, SIDS (cot death,) dental problems, breast cancer, allergies and asthma. Good job Litherland High School!!

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