Sex education. Do you think it should be taught in schools? What grades?

LadyEmeraude

Well-known Member
After just having a chat with a teacher I know, this topic came up.

This is an open topic, share whatever you want to. Say what you
feel and think.
 
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I had the class in 8th grade, unfortunately it was a male teacher and coed class. I was not comfortable at all.
In this current state of what is gender and not, I am not sure what would be right or if each student could
select the teacher and classmate attendees. It just could be a bit touchy or maybe kids now are not affected
as much as I was due to the "entertainment" they view anyway. I should just hush up now.
 
When my boys entered that stage their father had passed so it was up to me and did they squirm:ROFLMAO:
I was soft voiced but very blunt when it came to how to treat girls or not treat them. I guess I got my point
across. Each one had 1 steady GF (carefully chosen) through High school and no babies on the way.
Parents need to be involved too, not just schools.
 
I believe that age appropriate sex education, health, hygiene, life skills, etc… should be a part of public education from K-12.

Sadly, so many things are not properly covered at home, where I believe they should be, that the public school system really needs to step up and provide a clear consistent fact based and unbiased message for every kid to have a solid foundation for what life sends their way.
 
I believe that age appropriate sex education, health, hygiene, life skills, etc… should be a part of public education from K-12.
Fully agree. Our society over exposes children to sex at a very young age. TV, movies, internet, billboards, even slogans on T-shirts - it’s inescapable.

I’m not sure when to begin age appropriate sexual education but if you wait until, say, 7th grade you’ve probably waited too late.
 
Fully agree. Our society over exposes children to sex at a very young age. TV, movies, internet, billboards, even slogans on T-shirts - it’s inescapable.

I’m not sure when to begin age appropriate sexual education but if you wait until, say, 7th grade you’ve probably waited too late.
My belief is that it should start in kindergarten and continue through 12 grade.
 
Start early, make it age appropriate. Maybe a well trained specialist needs to teach these classes. It’s not just about facts. The online garbage shows things that are beyond the grasp of most young folks. They think they have to do or have done to them what they see.
 
As a teacher of science in a girls junior high school I taught some biology including the various systems of the human body. This included the digestive, skeletal and respiratory systems, circulation of the blood, hormones, and reproduction system. We did not talk about, nor teach very much about human sexual behaviour. I did manage to explain the various methods of contraception available at the time and how each one worked to avoid unwanted pregnancy. It was hardly enough but better than what I received at the same age.

When they asked questions, I did my best to give factual answers but steered away from morality. That was not the role of a science teacher.
 
We got "The Talk" in 9th grade. The girls' gym teacher took the girls off to one room and the boys' gym teacher took them off to another. "The Talk" consisted of very little practical knowledge or advice.

One thing I'll never forget was the teacher telling us that boys just couldn't help thinking about sex all the time because their sex organs were out there where they could see them and be reminded. This, apparently, made them 24-hour-a-day raging sex maniacs. We girls, on the other hand, had ours neatly tucked away and didn't have to think about them all the time. Thus, it was up to WE GIRLS to keep things under control.

Then we got to watch a lovely movie, very graphic, about venereal diseases.

One of my friends, who went to a convent school, was told never to go with a boy to a restaurant that had white tablecloths because as he sat across from you at the table, he would be thinking about beds. I guess the secret there was for mothers of boys to only have pink or blue or flowered sheets, so the boys won't be triggered by white tablecloths...LOL.

Anyway, after finding out that boys think about sex constantly, I couldn't look a guy in the eye because WHAT IF HE WAS THINKING ABOUT WANTING TO HAVE SEX WITH ME???? Of course, I had nothing to worry about. Frizzy hair, teenage acne, braces on my teeth, ugly glasses and a figure like a board, I doubt any of them were fantasizing about me in particular.

It's a wonder any of us ever moved on to actually....doing IT.
 
One of the boys in my 9th grade class had a book on sex. For a couple of days boys would be clustered around him at lunchtime in the gym. We know there is interest and if information isnt provided they will find something online or elsewhere.
 
I was educated in an all-girls Catholic school with Nun teachers. Never in our wildest dreams would they have instructed us in
sex education. One day a Priest came to our classroom and asked if we had any questions, we wanted him to answer. One girl
stood up and asked, "What was the longest time we could kiss a boy", and without hesitation he answered, "2 minutes and a
closed mouth". I think that was our sex education lesson. I'm afraid we learned about the "Birds & Bees" from other girls, my parents never instructed us at all.
 
I remember it in 7th and 8th grade. Class was split up, girls in one room boys in another. We had movies about the reproductive system. I was more like biology than sex, and even when it got into the mechanics of sex, it was something that all of us had already learned from older kids on the playground. I don't remember the teachers talking much. It's more like they used teaching aids provided to them. I didn't sense any harm from it. We were all excited about the upcoming event, but it wasn't exciting at all, nor was it disappointing. It was school as usual for the most part.

It had nothing to do with love making, stimulation, or caring for your partner. Maybe those were taught in some schools, but not mine. I think students needed a permission slip from parents to be exposed to it, but I can't remember any of my classmates having to sit it out. In conclusion, it just wasn't a big deal.
 
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