Consent Education
I will make age-appropriate consent education a core part of public education, giving students the tools to understand consent, boundaries, and healthy relationships.
I will make age-appropriate consent education a core part of public education, giving students the tools to understand consent, boundaries, and healthy relationships.
Sexual violence is one of the most widespread and under-addressed forms of harm in our society, being the second most common form of crime for people in the United States to experience after theft. For too long, our politics has treated sexual violence as an inevitable fact of life and our institutions have focused on responding only after the damage has already been done. I reject that. Sexual violence is preventable, and real public safety starts with prevention.
That means we need to stop pretending a few workplace trainings or college seminars are enough. Not only does research show that trainings for those 18+ have nearly no impact, nearly 80%y all of this harm occurs before age 18. A safer word that takes sexual violence seriously needs age-appropriate consent education in K-12 schools. And we need it done right.
Australia’s National Respectful Relationships Education Framework offers a strong model. It treats consent education not as a one-off lesson, but as part of a broader, evidence-based approach to teaching young people how to build respectful, equal, and safe relationships. It emphasizes that consent education should be age- and developmentally appropriate, expert-developed, embedded across school culture, and supported by families, educators, and communities.
Make Age-Appropriate Consent Education
I will pass legislation to fund and require the Department of Education to develop an age-appropriate consent education curriculum in K–12 schools, paired with emotional regulation, digital safety, and anti-bullying instruction. The model I support is evidence-based, expert-developed, and scaffolded by age: younger students learn bodily autonomy, boundaries, and emotional awareness; older students build toward consent, communication, healthy relationships, and sexual ethics. Strong frameworks abroad already use this whole-school approach and explicitly pair consent education with social-emotional learning and digital literacy.
Treat Prevention as Key to Ensuring Public Safety
Schools can play an important role in preventing gender-based violence by helping students build the knowledge and skills necessary for respectful relationships and by challenging harmful stereotypes early on in their development.
Make it Inclusive, Trauma-Informed, and Accessible
Consent education must be inclusive of LGBTQ+ students, students with disabilities, students from different cultural backgrounds, and students who have experienced trauma. It also means educators need proper training on how to respond to disclosures, prevent re-traumatization, and connect students to proper support.
Teach Emotional Regulation, Media Literacy, and Online Behavior Alongside Consent
Young people are learning about power, gender, relationships, and behavior online and offline every day. That is why I support pairing consent education with emotional regulation, critical media literacy, and digital literacy, so students can identify manipulation and coercion wherever they show up.
Proven Results at a Low Cost
The framework for this curriculum already exists and is proven to work. A survey conducted by Teach Us Consent, found a 43% increase in understanding of affirmative consent laws, with 93% of students reporting they received some form of sexual education in a 2021 survey. This program was piloted in Australia for a decade before being rolled out to all territories and states.
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