Greetings from the Take Issue, Take Charge guest bloggers! We are writing from the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û of Pennsylvania's .
Marshall Bright is an undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania who was instrumental in raising awareness of the problems with abstinence-only education in her private, all-female high school.Stephanie Chando is a Master of Social Work Candidate at the Penn School of Social Policy and Practice who became interested in advocating for comprehensive sex ed after evaluating two sex ed programs in Trenton, NJ. Sarah Coburn is a recent graduate of Smith College and currently serves as Project Coordinator at the Duvall Project whose main focus is advocating for comprehensive sexuality education throughout Pennsylvania.
Together, we have taken issue with abstinence-only-until-marriage programs and are devoted to the advancement of comprehensive sexuality education.We're eager to share our thoughts with you and openly welcome your comments:
The Philadelphia Inquirer on a high school in Mullica Hill, NJ, that is drawing criticism from concerned parents over their peer-education sex ed program. These parents have organized and even created a for parents to sign a petition and get a look at the "very graphic" curriculum their teens are being subjected to. Some of the "disturbing" material chosen for its particularly lurid content, includes information on things that kids don't know about (masturbation), things they should never know exist (condoms) and things they should never consider (tolerance of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people).
Depressing and intolerant as that may seem, students and parents in other communities are taking positive steps toward education, such as a group of teens in Utah who lobbied their senators for in sex ed.
In addition, not all parents are as reactionary as those few in Mullica Hill, NJ. In fact, some open-minded and involved parents are becoming advocates themselves, such as a group of parents in Pittsburgh who have for comprehensive sex ed. They are supported in their efforts by the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û of Pennsylvania.
In a warmer part of the country, Palm Beach County, FL, has realized that abstinence-only programming won't help their state's teen pregnancy woes; they are set to enact in April a that teaches sixth graders about STD's and seventh graders about condoms.
Peer education is taking off on the West Coast as well. In the San Fernando Valley, one program, Promoting Alternatives for Teen Health, is a aimed mainly at poor Latinos. I wonder if the concerned New Jersey parents could look at the grim statistics on HIV infections and pregnancy rates amongst these teens and still insist they shouldn't learn about condoms.
Another grim reason for increased sex education: unprotected oral sex may be more dangerous than originally thought. A recent study links unprotected oral sex to , including some rare throat and mouth cancers that previously were seen mainly in older heavy smokers. We can therefore expect to see such anomalous cancers in youth become more common if abstinence-only programs continue to preach a message where sex is shrouded in mystery and protection is never discussed.