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Should teens have sex education in schools?

Results so far:

Yes
88% 1229 votes Total: 1398 votes
No
12% 169 votes

Would you let your Kindergarten student walk to school without knowing how to cross the street safely? Of course not. You would be risking his health and even his life by doing so. Allowing your teenager to socialize with his peers, in today's cultural milieu with its laissez-faire attitude, without a proper course in sex education is every bit as hazardous as turning a small child loose in traffic.

Undoubtedly, the ideal place for sex education is the home. Unfortunately, even the best of parents are sometimes uncomfortable discussing the subject with their children. They may delay, waiting until the child asks questions. Before they realize it, the optimal time has come and gone. The child will be questioning, all right, but perhaps the wrong people. All kinds of misinformation is passed unwittingly between friends in the same age group.

Some parents buy books for their teens to read, believing that all the questions will be addressed and answered by the volume's author. However, few teens these days are interested in reading as a leisure-time activity. The book may end up under the bed or lying unopened on a shelf in the closet. Even the best-written, most informative publication will do no good under these circumstances.

Since accurate sex education is vital to the health and safety of every teenager, the school must assume the responsibility of delivering it. The basic factual information should be supplemented by parental perspectives, and moral guidelines from home, but even if this is not the case, the young people will at least have sufficient information, to keep themselves disease-free. Although abstinence from sexual activity until marriage should be presented as the ideal strategy, the students should also be taught how to avoid an unwanted pregnancy.

In a perfect world, sex education would not be left until high school.

In the Primary Grades a section of the Health curriculum, entitled "Family Life" should introduce the children to the proper names for body parts and explain how a baby grows inside its mother's uterus until it is ready to live on its own. This information would be presented within the context of a normal family, with textbook pictures of children with whom the students can identify.

In the Junior Grades, as the children approach puberty, the boys and girls should be separated and each group given information as to what bodily changes they can expect to experience during the next few years, as they become young


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Should teens have sex education in schools?

Yes
  • 1 of 168

    by Jessalyn Pinneo

    Should teens have sex education in schools? Absolutely. While part of me would like to say that it's the responsibi...read more

  • 2 of 168

    by Shelly Mcrae

    Teen-agers are usually well acquainted with the concepts, mechanics, and consequences of sex. They understand why the...read more

No
  • 1 of 11

    by Alycia Morales

    Sex education is something that should be taught at home, not in a public school system. If you want to teach human a...read more

  • 2 of 11

    by Crystal Lake

    The sexual education of teenagers is only the business of the parents and teenager in question, unless the parents de...read more

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