РефератыИностранный языкSeSex Education Essay Research Paper In today

Sex Education Essay Research Paper In today

Sex Education Essay, Research Paper


In today’s society there is an on going debate over sex education and its


influence on our children. "The question is no longer should sex education


be taught, but rather how it should be taught" (DeCarlo). With teenage


pregnancy rates higher than ever and the imminent threat of the contraction of


STD’s, such as HIV, the role of sex education in the school is of greater


importance now then ever before. By denying children sex education you are in a


sense sheltering them from the harsh realities they are bound to encounter. Sex


education has become an essential part of the curriculum and by removing the


information provided by this class we’ll be voluntarily putting our children in


danger. During the teenage years every boy and girl undergo major changes in the


body that most of the time need explaining. This underscores one of the most


evident reasons for sexual education being taught to students. Sex education can


help children to cope with the many changes caused by the onset of puberty. One


such example is a female’s first menstruation and the uneasiness they feel. If


this girl had been informed of this change prior to its onset, then her ability


to accept and understand it would be greatly enhanced. Hormonal and physical


changes in the body begin without warning and a child needs to know why these


changes are occurring. Lindsell 2 Students are taught about the anatomy of the


human body and how and why it works the way it does. Knowing and understanding


how ones body works is a fundamental part any persons life and ability to gain


this knowledge should not be removed. At the beginning of puberty hormones start


rushing and all teenagers begin to experience sexual urges. It’s not something


anyone, including a parent or teacher, can control. It’s a natural function of


the body and has been since the beginning of time. With this hormone rush comes


experimentation among teenagers. They begin to explore their bodies along with


the bodies of other people. "You can’t prevent teenagers from having sex,


no matter what you preach. If students are having sex they might as well do it


the safe way. It’s a way for schools to show that they actually care," says


Shauna Ling-Choung (qt. Richardson "When sex_" B1). Students need the


support from schools to know they have somewhere to go for the good or bad. With


sex education classes the students are taught about various methods of


contraception, including abstinence. By teaching the students about the many


types of contraception, the chance of contraceptives being used is greatly


increased. Many schools have recently begun programs to distribute condoms to


students in their schools in order to hopefully increase the use of condoms. A


recent study shows that the availability of condoms in schools did in fact


increase condom use. Condom access is a "low-cost harmless addition"


to our current sex education programs (Richardson "Condoms in_" B8).


When thinking of sex education for our children, the clich? "better


safe than sorry" should immediately come to mind. Along with teaching


contraceptives to students the vital information of STD’s are also Lindsell 3


taught. Currently, out of all age groups, teenagers have the highest rates of


sexually transmitted diseases, with one in four young people contracting and STD


by the age of twenty-one (DeCarlo). Included in the STD category is the HIV


virus, which is spreading at alarming rates among our teenage population.


"It is believed that at least twenty percent of new patients with AIDS were


infected during their teenage or early adult years." And still some school


leaders are trying to remove our best means of prevention of the disease: sex


education (Roye 581) Teachers are able to educate students with the correct


information on the many types of sexually transmitted diseases that exist in the


world today. False information about ways of contracting diseases, symptoms of


and treatments of STDs, and preventative measures are weeded out and students


receive the accurate information about sexually transmitted diseases. Protection


of our children from sexually transmitted diseases should start in the classroom


where it can be assured that the correct and critical information will be


provided to them. Nobody likes to be talked to like they are a child, and by


denying teenagers sexual education, schools are in a sense talking down to them.


By teaching them the facts about sex, teenagers feel a sense of maturity because


it’s a mature topic and they are fully aware of that. Students get the feeling


that the adults in their lives feel that they are responsible enough to learn


about this topic. Therefore bringing on more of a response from teenagers. They


know they are being treated as adults so they are going to pay attention to what


they are being taught and then act as adults and carry out what they were


taught. Teenagers appreciate when adults treat them as equals, and anyone will


see that children will always respond better to this than to being treated as a


child. Lindsell 4 Much of the typical family structure in the United States and


many other places in the world have deteriorated over the last century. A good


portion of parents today are divorced and many of the families that haven’t


experienced divorce live with both parents working full time jobs. Families


today aren’t like the family on "Leave It to Beaver," a sitcom that


aired in the sixties; the mother isn’t home all day baking and making sure that


the house is clean. Since famil

y structure has changed, so have the way children


are being raised. Society cannot count on all parents to instill morals into


their children and teach them the facts of life or even the difference between


right and wrong these days. Parents just don’t have the time for it. Recently


the Vatican released a document stating that " parents alone cannot give


children the positive sex education they need to develop healthy attitudes


towards sex" (Euchner). Another view on the subject taken by the Nebraska


Public School system is that sex education in today’s society is to complicated


to be left to "the varying influences of parental attitudes and haphazard


environmental exposure" (Chaumont et al.). Besides, even if the parent were


around more often then not, the chances of a child approaching their parent


about the "bird and the bees" is very unlikely. These children need to


have a place were the information on this touchy subject is provided to them


without them needing to ask. "Kids don’t go asking their parents, this is


the only way for them to find out answers because they are to embarrassed to ask


anyone else," says Pallodino, and eighteen-year-old from Virginia. (O’Hanlon


B8). In order for children to grow up with the correct information regarding


sex, it is necessary to have sex education provided to them in schools. Even


though sex education seems as if it can do no wrong, there still remain many


Lindsell 5 opponents, including many authors who clearly express their view,


that are still against it in our schools. There are many reasons why people feel


like this, two of which are they feel as if sex education does no good at all


and another is that people feel that it is influencing students to have sex.


Ellen Hopkins, author of "Sex is for Adults", says that sex education


does many great things , except for the one thing we want it to do, make our


children more responsible. (Hopkins 589). She feels as though the information


that students are receiving is not having any influence on them. The feeling


that sex education classes are influencing teenagers to have sex is a feeling


that is shared by William Kilpatrick. He states that "as the statistics


show, American teenagers are living up to expectation. They are having more sex


and using more condoms" (Kilpatrick 597). These two individuals, along with


many others, feel that sex education is doing more harm then it is good. Teenage


sexual activity has been raising steadily for more than two decades until now. A


recent survey shows the first drop since the nineteen seventies. In 1990 girls


that had engaged in sexual intercourse was at fifty-five percent, until 1995


when it dropped to fifty percent. The percentage of boys engaging in sexual


intercourse also dropped by five percent. The use of condoms have tripled since


the 1970’s showing people are being safer about sex (Vobejda et al. A1). A poll


done by Reuter’s show that eighty-two percent of the people who participated in


the survey supported sex education in schools (Yahoo). Studies obviously show


that sex education courses are helping today’s teenagers to become more


responsible for their own actions. The information that sex education provides


teenagers is indispensable. Schools are meant to educate our children in not


just one topic but all topics. "Why would anyone on the state Board


Lindsell 6 of Education not want to cover something comprehensively? Do we take


that approach with history or math?" says Denice Bruce of Wichita, Kansas


(Associated Press). Sexually educating our children is just important if not


more important than math or history because sex education can mean the


difference between life and death of your child.


afb


"Board refuses restriction on sex education in schools." Associated


Press. February 1996: n. pag. Online. Netscape. 29 March 1998. Chaumont,


Michelle; Galing, Samantha et al. "Sex education in Nebraska Public


Schools." Online. Netscape. 28 March 1998. "Does Sex Education


Work." Center for AIDS Prevention Studies. Online. Netscape. 29 October


1999. Euchner, Charlie. "The Vatican Endorses Sex Education in


Schools." Teacher Magazine. December 1983: n. pag. Online. Netscape. 1


April 1998. Hopkins, Ellen. "Sex Is for Adults." Rottenberg. 588-591.


Kilpatrick, William. "Sex Education." Rottenberg. 591-602 O’Hanolan,


Ann. "It’s a Fact of Life, Va. Youths Say: Sex Education Belongs in


Schools." Washington Post 14 June. 1997: B8. "Poll: Americans Favor


Sex Education In Schools." Yahoo News-Reuters. Online. Netscape. 29 March


1998. Richardson, Lynda. "Condoms in School said not to Affect Teen-Age Sex


Rate." New York Times 30 September. 1997: B8. Richardson, Lynda. "When


Sex is just a Matter of Fact." New York Times 16 October. 1997: B1.


Rottenberg, Annette T., ed. Elements of Argument. Boston, Ma: Bedford Books,


Lindsell 8 1997. Roye, Carol F. "Protect Our Children." Rottenberg.


581-582 Vobejda, Barbara; Havemann, Judith. "Teenagers Less Sexually Active


in U.S." Washington Post. 2 May. 1997: A1 Lindsell 9 Sex Education and the


Classroom Steffanie Lindsell A. Mammary Contemporary Moral Problems T/TR 11:30


Final paper Steffanie Lindsell November 2, 1999 Contemporary Moral Problems T/TR


11:30 A. Mammary Thesis: With teenage pregnancy rates higher than ever and the


imminent threat of the contraction of STD’s, such as HIV, the role of sex


education in the school is of greater importance now than ever before.

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