Closed SamLR closed 3 weeks ago
Is sexuality interesting or useful at all?
I'm not sure how useful it is for people with autism, ADHD, HIV, diabetes, or epilepsy to tell us. This feels more like a list of things that might be disabilities if untreated than things that are useful for tracking diversity, especially when we say "or health conditions".
Is sexuality interesting or useful at all?
We want to include it for completeness, not because we suspect there are any issues there.
I'm not sure how useful it is for people with autism, ADHD, HIV, diabetes, or epilepsy to tell us. This feels more like a list of things that might be disabilities if untreated than things that are useful for tracking diversity, especially when we say "or health conditions".
The source for that is here but I do agree that it might not be the most relevant breakdown for us. For diversity stats we should be asking the broadest question which is useful, but we ideally also need more specific info on physical accessibility needs. For the time being we can punt the latter issue until later - the impetus here is that we want to put a request in the post-event email for people to fill this in.
I probably should have called this out in the PR itself but this form does feed data with multiple uses (which are somewhat tangential to one-another):
These are all broadly similar but owned by different teams (e.g. content/site/stage) and have different needs WRT forward/backwards looking.
I think I have a general preference to keep to standard forms of these questions as much as possible unless there's a good reason not as it simplifies external comparison.
For 2026 I think adding a more targetted question around specific accessibility interventions on site might be useful but are folks broadly happy with these questions as is?
Add disability & sexuality questions from
https://becoming-a-teacher.design-history.education.gov.uk/apply-for-teacher-training/changing-how-we-ask-about-disabilities-and-health-conditions/
and
https://www.ons.gov.uk/census/censustransformationprogramme/questiondevelopment/sexualorientationquestiondevelopmentforcensus2021