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Embargoed not for publication or broadcast until 00:01 30 September 2011 - Pre-teens body confidence teaching aids unveiled
A new 'media literacy' teaching pack to help children understand how the media often alter images and the impact these have on self esteem, was backed by Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone today.
The teaching materials developed by not-for-profit company Media
Smart mark an important contribution to the government's
ongoing Body Confidence campaign.
Primary school teachers will be able to download the
materials to structure a lesson specifically tailored to the 10-11
age group - an important stage in a young person's
development.
Pupils will be guided to look carefully at the images they
see in order to gain a more realistic perception of what is real
and what is not. The lessons will explore how and why idealised
images in advertising and the media are used to construct
particular messages and make people feel a certain way.
Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone said:
"Young people are being set an impossible standard
by the images they are confronted with on a daily basis from the
media and advertising and there is evidence to suggest this has a
negative impact on self esteem.
"I want children to recognise from an early age that
their value is worth so much more than just their physical appearance.
"I am delighted to have worked with Media Smart to
produce this important work."
Media Smart Chairman Paul Jackson said:
"Media Smart develops lessons to help children think
critically about the advertising and media they see on an everyday
basis. We were delighted to work with Lynne Featherstone and her
team to develop a lesson around such an important and topical
issue.
"In trials of the lesson we found that children
responded really well when they realised that most of the images
they see have been altered in some way and are aspirational but
not realistic."
Psychoanalyst, writer and convenor of campaign group Anybody,
Susie Orbach said:
"Body confidence is a society wide issue. A lack of
it can erode children's self worth.
"Enabling children, their parents and teachers to
recognise how images in the media and advertising are altered and
the often negative impact this has on all of our self esteem is
crucial.
"Giving primary school children the tools which
allow them to see the differences between the real and the
fantastical is part of helping them develop a sense of self worth
and confidence from an early age."
Mumsnet co-founder and Chief Executive Justine Roberts said:
"In recent years we've seen many
discussions on Mumsnet about the pressure on children to conform
to impossible stereotypes, and the impact this might have on their self-esteem.
"I'm sure many Mumsnetters will welcome
this really useful tool, which should help children understand
that the kind of bodies reflected in the media are often
manipulated to present a distorted view of perfection.
"Enabling children to 'read' these
marketing images is empowering - and will build the confidence
they need to be happy in their own bodies."
096/2011
NOTES TO EDITORS
1. Teachers can download the Media Smart Body Image lesson
free from the Media Smart website: www.mediasmart.org.uk
For more information on Media Smart and to request an
interview with Paul Jackson, please contact Magdalen Bush on 020
7526 3600 / 07712001387.
2. To request a copy of the teaching pack please contact
Caroline Jack Home Office Press Office on 020 7035 3846.
3. The government launched the body confidence project in
2010 to raise awareness about body image and encourage a more open
and public conversation. For more information on the project visit
the Home Office website: www.homeoffice.gov.uk/body-confidence 4.
Evidence that the public feel pressure and want the visual
landscape to change:
YMCA poll:
• 90 per cent of adults would like to see a broader range of
body shapes represented in advertisements and the media more
widely.
• 64 per cent of adults felt that people’s lives were
affected by images of models in the media.
• 94 per cent of
women think that children are under more pressure to around their
physical appearance that they were 20 years ago.
• Over 80
per cent of women feel that the media (broadcast and print), the
fashion industry and celebrity culture promotes an ideal body
shape
• Over a quarter of women say that their bodies make
them feel depressed and that they feel under pressure to change
their body shape
TNS face-to-face Omnibus Survey of parents for Bailey Review
2011:
• “Do you think that any of the following put too much
pressure on children to conform to a particular body shape and size?”
* Celebrity culture - 65 per cent
* Pictures in
magazines and newspapers - 57 per cent
* Music
shows\videos\dvds - 47 per cent
* Adult style clothes for
children in shops - 45 per cent
* Imagery in adverts - 44 per cent
Girls’ Attitudes Survey, 2010
• Girls were asked about the advantages and disadvantages of
being a girl – 47 per cent felt one of the disadvantages of being
a girl was the pressure to look attractive. This increased to 73
per cent for 16-21 year olds.
• 25 per cent of girls felt
that it was important that role models are attractive.
•
According to 11 to 21 year-olds who have been on a diet (50 per
cent), the most common reason was to be more attractive, either to
other
people (75 per cent) or because of the way the media
portrays women (66 per cent).
• The proportion of girls
linking diets to media portrayals of women increases with age:
• 40 per cent of 11- to 13-year-olds
• 58 per cent of
14- to 16-year-olds.
• 82 per cent of 16- to
21-year-olds
• Younger girls were more likely to say that
girls dieted for health reasons
Contacts:
Home Office Press Office
Phone: 020 7035 3535
NDS.HO@coi.gsi.gov.uk