Sexuality Education and Desire: Still Missing after All These Years
I found reading about the abstinence only until marriage (AOUM) education very interesting. It made me think about the two health classes I can remember taking. The first was in sixth grade and it was part of the FACS (which I think stood for family and consumer sciences) classes. There we were taught mainly about abstinence as a form of birth control. We were all about eleven years old, and I think that kind of message was appropriate for students of our age. I think most people can agree that eleven is still pretty young for kids to be thinking about having sex. Looking back at that health class I feel like we were properly informed about sex education for our age.
The second time I had a health class was as a freshman in high school. There the program was different. abstinence was not the only form of birth control that we were taught about. In this class we learned about a wide array of birth control options along with abstinence. I think my high school clearly understood that they were not going to be sucessful in stopping all of its students from having sex. We had a couple teenage pregancies a year at my school. Clearly not all of the students there were taking chasity vows. So in our health classes my fellow students and I received what I preceive to be a pretty comprehensive sexual education. Because of this, I was semi-surprised to read this article and to see that most schools do not seem to do the same as my high school did. I guess I was a bit naive in my thinking.
I guess some people would look at the pregnancy rate at my high school and say that the comprehensive education isn't working and that the students need to be taught along the AOUM lines. I would disagree with that. I think there is a time and a place for that kind of sexual education. I think it was fitting in my middle school class. As for high schools I think educators need to understand what teenagers are going through bioloically at that age. I think we need to realize that teenagers today are not all going to successfully remain abstinant until marriage. We should be providing them with a comprehensive education, not only about what they are biologically experiencing, but also all the ways that they can prevent an unwanted pregnancy.
I had a similar health and sexual education in high school. what I find outrageous is that nearly ten years later the programs have not become more extensive and better taught. There seems to be a strong regression movement in our country. It almost seems like people became convinced that comprehensive sex ed classes were responsible for the increasing teen pregnancy and have now decided to remove any education these students would benefit from knowing.
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