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The changes prompted some parents to protest and even pull their children from public school, saying the new program is not appropriate for school-aged children and does not align with their values.

Brown told The Canadian Press in an interview in June that he would not repeal the curriculum if elected.

“But what I would say is that I do want to see our curriculum updated,” he said at the time. “I want to have a greater emphasis on financial literacy in a more robust fashion. I’m very interested in the practical implications of having coding added to the curriculum.”

Brown does not identify in the letter any changes he would like to see to the sex-ed curriculum, but says that reading, writing and math are all parts of a “well-rounded curriculum.”

“I believe sex-ed is important, but it cannot be significantly changed without extensively consulting the primary educators of children, who have always been parents,” he wrote.

During the party’s leadership race last year, Brown spoke at a rally protesting the sex-ed curriculum, saying, “Teachers should teach facts about sex education, not values,” without identifying what parts of the curriculum he felt were teaching values.

A spokeswoman for Education Minister Mitzie Hunter said scrapping the current curriculum would put young people at risk.

“Our students deserve an up-to-date, research-based curriculum that provides them with the knowledge and skills to stay healthy and safe in today’s complex and ever-changing world,” Nicole McInerney said in an emailed statement.