Pupils aged 16-18 are one step closer to receiving compulsory consent, domestic abuse and relationships lessons – as campaigners claim a win after years of letdowns.
Big Issue Changemaker Faustine Petron has been campaigning for years to get governments to introduce compulsory Relationships and Sex Education (RSE) lessons for 16-18 year-olds.
But years of promises did not materialise. In 2023, the Conservative government said it was “considering” a recommendation by MPs on the women and equalities committee. In 2025, MP Zarah Sultana put forward an amendment which would have made the lessons law.
Now, the government has committed that the minister for skills is “exploring the most effective route” to making the lessons mandatory, as part of its recently-unveiled Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) strategy.
Read more:
- Compulsory domestic abuse lessons for over 16s could help ‘prevent misogynistic murders’, MPs told
- Young people to be taught about consent amid warnings ‘we cannot police our way out of crisis’
- The government’s plan to protect domestic abuse survivors has big gaps
“I have been campaigning on this issue since I was 21, when I began my undergraduate degree. I’m now 25 and completing a PhD, and in all that time I have never seen the government accept or agree that RSE is needed post-16,” says Petron.