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When Sex Ed Becomes Porn 101
The Heritage Foundation ^ | 8/27/03 | Robert Rector

Posted on 08/28/2003 11:13:22 AM PDT by Adder

It’s “Back To School” time again, and here’s the first pop quiz. No, it’s not for the kids. It’s for parents, and they have to answer only one question: Do you know what your children are learning in sex-education classes? If you’re like most parents, the answer is no. But if the program is billed as “abstinence-based,” you probably don’t feel particularly concerned. The important thing, as far as you’re concerned, is that your kids are being taught to say “no” to sex.

But are they? The fact is, nearly all of the government-funded abstinence-based or “abstinence-plus” programs delivered in schools nationwide contain little, if any, reference to abstinence. They may mention it briefly, but it’s often presented as something that (wink, wink) kids in the “real world” will ignore.

Far worse, though, is what abstinence-plus programs do contain: explicit demonstrations of contraceptive use -- especially condoms -- and direct encouragement to experiment sexually.

This despite the fact that parents consistently say they don’t want their children to be exposed to such messages. A recent Zogby poll found that three out of every four parents disapproved or strongly disapproved of abstinence-plus curricula. About the same number say they want their children to receive an authentic abstinence education.

More likely, though, their children are being exposed to programs such as “Focus on Kids” (which, like other abstinence-plus programs, is heavily promoted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Kids are told, among other things, to go on a “condom hunt” to local stores to survey the various types of family planning methods and ask: “What’s the cheapest price for three condoms?”

Focus on Kids also has teachers stage “condom races” between teams of students. (Warning: Explicit language ahead.) “Each person on the team must put the condom on the dildo or cucumber and take it off,” the program says. “The team that finishes first wins.” But intercourse isn’t the only topic on the agenda. Teachers are told to have the kids “brainstorm ways to be close. The list may include … body massage, bathing together, masturbation, sensuous feeding, fantasizing, watching erotic movies, reading erotic books and magazines …”

Unfortunately, Focus on Kids isn’t the only program that takes such an approach. In “Becoming a Responsible Teen,” or B.A.R.T., kids get an education not only in condoms but in lubricants: “If you were trying to find something around the house, or at a convenience store, to use as a [lubricant] substitute, what would be safe? Why? … Some ‘grocery store’ lubricants are safe to use if they do not contain oil: grape jelly, maple syrup and honey.”

Then there’s the ironically named “Be Proud! Be Responsible!” program, which lists several ways teachers can show kids as young as 13 “how to make condoms fun and pleasurable.” For example, “once you and a partner agree to use condoms … go to the store together. Buy lots of different brands and colors. Plan a special day when you can experiment. Just talking about how you’ll use all of those condoms can be a turn-on.”

And who knows where you’ll be when the mood strikes? Perhaps that’s why the CDC-approved “Reducing the Risk” program advises teachers to tell kids, while they’re shopping for condoms, to “put down the store’s hours, too, because it may be important to know where to get protection at some odd hours.” There are also family-planning clinics, of course: Students who might worry about what Mom and Dad think are told, “you do not need a parent’s permission … no one needs to know that you are going to a clinic.”

It helps to engage in some “role playing,” too, according to the “Be Proud! Be Responsible!” program. Two females, “Tyceia” and “Felicia,” are told to “begin negotiating safer sex” together. They’ve been “sexually active with males in the past,” but now they can “accept” their bisexuality. Male students aren’t excluded: “Gerald” is told that “Allen has never used condoms. You want to have sex with him, but not without using condoms.”

It’s bad enough that these sex-ed programs hide under an abstinence-plus label while completely undermining what most parents want for their children. But when they encourage indiscriminate condom use and sexual experimentation, they’re sending kids a troubling message -- that we expect them to be sexually active and approve of it, provided it’s “safe.” And it’s all billed to you, the taxpayer. Is that what we want?

Robert Rector is a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research institute.

Distributed nationally on the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire


TOPICS: Education; Health/Medicine; Society
KEYWORDS: culture; education; kids
What do we DO about it? Its everywhere and it seems all we can do is complain. It doesn't stop...it only gets worse.
1 posted on 08/28/2003 11:13:22 AM PDT by Adder
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To: Adder
Government run schools should be strictly for welfare kids whose parents don't give rat's patootie what they're doing. That's who these programs are really designed for and, realistically, most of those kids need this type of proram -- self-control and deferred gratification are not concepts they're ever seen in action at home, and they aren't going to exercise them in their own lives, regardless of what some teacher says. Everybody else's kids should be educated via a voucher program which provides the FULL amount of per student spending in the jurisdiction to whoever is educating the kids -- homeschoolers included.
2 posted on 08/28/2003 12:46:24 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Adder
My grandmother and mother "tsk tsk-ed" and shook their heads when I started wearing make-up at 13. Now, instead of choosing an eyeshadow color, they are being taught to buy colored condoms!!! I'm outraged, and I suppose it's time I joined my mom and grandma....

Tsk.....tsk....tsk... (shaking head)

Only difference is, I'll take action!

3 posted on 08/28/2003 2:00:21 PM PDT by kimmie7 (I need more time, more coffee, and more bandwidth.)
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To: GovernmentShrinker
...-- homeschoolers included...

I like that idea........

4 posted on 08/28/2003 2:05:49 PM PDT by WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
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To: WhyisaTexasgirlinPA
You'd love it in my local school district, where per student annual spending has recently crossed the $20,000 mark. And what kind of schools are we getting for that kind of money? The kind where the school board explains that one of the unavoidable increases in spending for the coming year is due to the need to hire a new high school principal. The last one is out on long term (maybe permanent) disability, due to a back injury which required surgery -- after he was attacked by one of those of little darlings that we spend $20,000 a year on! I'm sure another cost increase is for the district's liability insurance, which surely took a big hop after this incident.
5 posted on 08/28/2003 2:31:29 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: kimmie7
What will you do?
I am curious. I've tried letters. I don't have kids in school any longer but still, ya know?
The ones in charge hide what they are doing and pull out their most condescending attitudes when questioned. "they" all buy into what they are doing.
So, what will you do?
6 posted on 08/28/2003 4:47:22 PM PDT by Adder
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