Fury over year 9 students in South Australia being asked to debate whether the tradwife movement is good for women

Summary
Debating SA says callers have been ‘ringing up screaming’, accusing it of undoing centuries of female advancement Australia news live: latest politics updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Year 9 students in South Australia are about to debate whether “the ‘tradwife’ movement is good for women” – but the topic has sparked fierce discussion before the debates have even started. “‘Trad wife’ is not code for stay-at-home parent,” she wrote, and later added: “For those who think it’s a great debate topic – we can agree to disagree on this one.” Sparrow later closed comments on her post, saying she did not have time to continually monitor them to “ensure a war hasn’t erupted”. Speaking not about the tradwife debate but about debating in general, Fiona Mueller, a public policy researcher from the Centre for Independent Studies, said Australians had become “strangely fearful” of debating, when it is something that “is at the heart of our democratic process”. “And I understand it comes with some controversy, but I think it’s a balancing act in terms of debating topics, between having something which is of interest to the people doing the debating … and not having something which is, I guess, overly provocative,” he said. But once it heard about it, it wrote to schools to say it saw “tradwife” as a portmanteau of “traditional wife … someone who stayed at home, looked after the children, kept the house”, without any concept of submission to the man of the house. After the topic was announced in May, some people questioned on social media whether the topic was appropriate, with some concerned that female students arguing in the affirmative would be making the case for their own subjugation. “That is the single greatest responsibility of each generation – to set a good example for the next generation, and one of the things we need to set that example in, is respectful, thoughtful debate.” The spokesperson told Guardian Australia people had been “ringing up screaming, ranting, raving and carrying on” and accusing the not-for-profit of undoing centuries of female advancement. Sparrow wrote that the term tradwife “refers to women adhering to strict gender roles akin to a 1950s housewife who eschews a career in place of homemaking because that’s her role/place”. “They didn’t follow the rules!” A Queensland-based teen educator and author, Rebecca Sparrow, shared an email