Did your heart just start beating faster? Even the term "sex" or
"family life education" brings panic, fear, and increases the heartbeat
and sweat glands in most adults. However, once the panic subsides, the
debate over whether to have sex education in American schools or not -
is done. A new poll finds that over 90% of Americans say sex education
should be taught in schools. According to the poll, the surveyed parents
supported teaching 7th and 8th graders basic information on how babies
are made, and 56 percent supported teaching all aspects of sex
education, including birth control and safer sex in 7th and 8th grade,
with a much higher percentage agreeing it should be taught in High
School.
On the other hand, exactly who IS getting taught about sex?
Unfortunately, the nationwide trend is that fewer young people are
learning how to reduce the risk of getting a disease and preventing
pregnancy. "The majority of school systems now focus on delaying sexual
education as long as possible," said Barbara Huberman, the director of
education for Advocates for Youth, a pro-education group in Washington,
D.C. "While you may get an overview of contraception in the seventh or
eighth grade, there are many, many school systems that are afraid to
talk about it at all." It is in your best interest to speak with your
parents of your intentions. Parents are the two most honest people in
your life that will give sound advice. There may not be happy with your
teen sex exploits, nonetheless they will be there for you, if you go
against their better judgment. If you have only just met your partner,
trust will not have matured yet, so wait. Sex can leave you feeling
vulnerable, is this - what you want, a partner who has their wicked way
with you and disappears into the night? Good sex happens with someone
you love and trust, are content with, and who you can talk to openly
about your feelings.
I am a School Nurse at a Middle School in a suburb of a large city.
They teach about "abstinence" in a brief session. Then, on a daily
basis, I get to deal with the student's choices and mistakes. I hear
stories that make me want to cry. I hear parents frequently say, "my
daughter/son would never do that", or "I don't think (insert child's
name here) would ever have sex". The all seem horrified at the thought.
But, what I see and hear on consistently (and remember, this is middle
school) tells a different story. Just so you don't think my school is
unusual, I read articles and stories from nurses all over the country
that say the same thing.
I have girls coming to me fearing pregnancy (and some really are
pregnant). Some of these same girls have had multiple partners (yes,
they are only 12-14 years old and yes, some are a mandatory CPS/Law
Enforcement call). Amazingly, these same girls will say statements like,
"I know that you can get pregnant through oral sex, but I try to be
careful". They ARE too young to be having sex, but it is happening - and
not infrequently. We may have grown up in a different time, and want to
believe it can't happen in our own home, but let me give you some hard
statistics:
The average girl today begins to develop some characteristics of
puberty between ages 10 and 11, with many showing some changes at ages
eight or nine. One in 12 students experience their first sexual
intercourse before age 13, and a quarter of all children (24 percent of
girls and 27 percent of boys) have had sex by age 15, and many believe
these estimates to be low. Remember, these numbers do not include the
"everything but intercourse" in them. Each year, one in four sexually
active teens contracts a sexually transmitted disease. Genital herpes
(which cannot be cured) has increased by almost 30% in young people in
the last 9 years. There are over 900,000 teen pregnancies per year. When
it comes to HIV, the largest increase in cases is seen in teenagers.
These statistics are frightening.
Ideally, parents should give strong teaching to their kids about
honesty, integrity, self-value, and abstinence for the first 10 to 12
years of life. If they did a really good job of this, and taught their
children to make good decisions, we wouldn't be having this epidemic and
being forced to have as many conversations with 14, 15 and 16 years old
about what to do about an unplanned pregnancy or a STD. Which leads to
why this should be taught in the school - parents would be the ideal
choice to teach this to children. That would be assuming you have
parents who are willing to do so. But, a majority of parents don't know
how to talk to their kids about sex and sexually transmitted diseases.
The other part of that equation is that many families today are very
dysfunctional - some parents abuse alcohol, drugs, work too many hours,
have high stress or anxiety, or have various other reasons for not
having the ability to talk with their children. That leaves the "job" of
teaching kids about sex and STD's to the educational system. Although
this is an uncomfortable subject, it IS an important one. I am a strong
believer in abstinence. If it were up to me, everyone would abstain
until marriage. However, I am a realist as well. We cannot bury our
heads in the sand and hope teen sex goes away. Teens are "doing it",
getting pregnant, and catching diseases. They need education and support
and we need to guide them. It is our job as educators and adults to
keep them safe. Please start early talking to your kids and have a good
relationship with them about everything.
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