The education they always deserved.
Fae is a progressive, RSHE evidence-informed curriculum for secondary schools, designed to give young women the hormonal health literacy they've always been owed. Spanning KS3 through to Sixth Form, Fae guides students from the foundations of menstrual understanding all the way through to advocating for their own wellbeing.
Every Fae workshop is built around real conversation. Through interactive, personalised sessions and open discussion, girls develop the hormonal literacy to truly understand their health and the confidence to speak up for it. This isn't a classroom lecture. It's the session they'll remember.
KS3 — ages 11–14
1. Understanding your cycle 2. Bodies & hormones 3. Emotions & your cycle 4. Talking about periods
Most girls reach puberty without ever truly understanding it. Across four units, Fae KS3 changes that by building genuine hormonal literacy from the ground up and giving young women permission to take their health seriously.
By the end of KS3, students will
Understand the four phases of the menstrual cycle and the hormones that drive them
Be able to identify physical and emotional changes linked to their cycle
Have strategies to manage PMS and emotional shifts with self-compassion
Feel confident talking about periods with trusted adults and peers
KS4 — ages 14–16
1. Hormonal health in depth
2. Nutrition & the cycle
3. Sleep, stress & hormones
4. Contraception & choices
From endometriosis to cortisol, contraception to cycle nutrition — KS4 is where the deeper conversations begin. Fae equips students with honest, complete knowledge so they can make informed decisions and navigate their health with confidence.
By the end of KS4, students will
Understand common hormonal health conditions and when to seek support
Know how nutrition, sleep and stress directly impact the hormonal cycle
Be able to make informed, confident decisions about contraception
Have the tools to navigate the healthcare system as a young woman
KS5 — ages 16–18
1. Advanced hormonal science
2. Mental health & hormones
3. Advocacy & systemic change
4. Life transitions
The final stage of the Fae curriculum is where science meets activism. Students master the endocrine system, explore the gender health gap and leave school as informed, empowered advocates for their own — and each other's — long-term health.
By the end of KS5, students will
Have advanced understanding of the endocrine system and hormonal conditions
Be able to critically engage with women's health research and medical bias
Know how to support peers experiencing hormonal mental health challenges
Leave school as confident advocates for their own long-term hormonal health
Young women spend years learning about almost everything, except the body they live in. Fae exists to change that.