AOG
There is an accepted word that women use for close female friends...'girlfriend'.
Straight men don't refer to their close male friends as 'boyfriends'.
It simply doesn't happen. Do you agree with this?
When a child, of say six, hears that a man has a boyfriend, that child will perceive that as a very close friend...possibly a best friend (as you have already stated), and that's perfect.
...because later on, when the kid is a little older, they will understand that 'boyfriend' in this context means a man that another man loves.
And then later on, say when the kid enters his/her teenage years, the will be sufficiently free of ignorance to understand the sexual context of the relationship.
I fail to understand where the issue lies.
What these proposals mean is that teachers will be given materials which will hel them in best best applying these principles at age-appropriate stages.
It's not like there will be Tolerance lessons every Friday after lunch...it means that teachers will be guided on how to introduce inclusivity in lessons and how to deal with homophobic bullying.
I think that this is an important step, because way too many gay teens contemplate or actually attempt to commit suicide:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/two-out-of-every-five-victims-of-school-homophobic-bullying-contemplate-suicide-says-survey-7917473.html
If the £2million goes to reducing this figure, I think that would be money well spent.