By Amelia Marshall
The makers of film Gayby Baby are today launching a resource they hope will help school students understand the changing face of Australian families.
Key points:
- Tool to teach about different types of modern Australian families
- Available free to schools, designed for years 5 to 10
- Victorian Government welcomes new resource
- NSW Government supportive, but will not endorse
The documentary, which follows young people who have same-sex parents, made headlines last year when it was banned from New South Wales schools by the state’s Education Minister Adrian Piccoli.
The filmmakers have launched the School Action Toolkit, which was written by education specialists and is intended to be taught under the health and physical education curriculum.
It aims to educate teachers and students about the different types of families that exist in modern Australia – from single parent households to same-sex parented families.
The toolkit has been developed for school years 5 to 10 and is available for free from the film’s website.
Director Maya Newell said the school resources included lesson plans that helped teachers explain different types of families.
“We’re talking about generations of children that already exist,” Ms Newell said.
“Same-sex families, all different types of families are not a new thing.
The shameful banning of the film in NSW just showed how far we’ve got to go, so we’re more than happy to make sure this tool is available to our schools.
Victorian Minister for Equality Martin Foley
“And I think that we can all agree that supporting kids to feel happy and healthy and accepted and validated can only be positive.”
The film was banned in NSW schools after Burwood Girls High School in Sydney’s inner west sent parents a flyer informing them that all students would attend a screening of the film Gayby Baby during class hours.
The screening was intended to be part of Wear It Purple Day – an initiative designed to promote acceptance and tolerance of diversity.
Top Comments
I use to be a fierce defender of the Safe Schools Program and the like, but I don't like this, frankly. Sure, there are different types of families - people, including kids - know that, don't they?
With the Gayby Baby controversy last year, apparently it was banned because the Principal of Burwood Girls' Grammar didn't comply with DET's guidelines.
Make the school environment safe for all children, including those in non - traditional families and those who identify as LGBTQ+. But I agree with one of the early comments. Carols are banned in fear it'll cause offence. Rightly or wrongly, some people agree that the traditional family is preferable for children. I don't think you're going to win them over by hitting them over the head with the issue.
Schools are not the place for pushing social agendas. When kids can't sing Christmas carols at school because it's offensive I scratch my head and can't believe that this is acceptable.