loquasagacious
NCAP Mooderator
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2004
- Messages
- 3,636
- Gender
- Undisclosed
- HSC
- 2004
Angling for a job?I find sexual education in schools to be completely useless, and it needs to stop being taught by teachers who are apparently uneasy with the idea of saying penis three times in 60 seconds.
It needs to be realistic, it needs to be graphic and the psychology more than the 'thrusting in and out' needs to be touched on.
Sex needs to stop being seen as such a taboo subject. I have kids come in to work asking for condoms, and it takes every ounce of courage for them to ask me and I just think, why? Why are they so conditioned to be so embarrassed to ask for contraceptives.
I also disagree with the emphasis on abstinence. Kids are going to have sex. Accept it. Of course it should be mentioned that realistically, abstinence is the only 100% contraception out there.
But really the key areas are
- The emotional effects of sex. Chances are it is not going to be awesome the first time you do it. There are ways in which you can make it more enjoyable. Sex is not mechanical! Engage in foreplay, get excited. The more lubricated and less tense you are down there, less chance of the condom breaking!
- The pathology of STD s and their transmittence.
- The methods of contraception available
- Honesty - with your sexual partner
- Available help should you find that you are pregnant, with an STD or rendered emotionally vulnerable after a traumatic 30 seconds of pubescent sex.
All of this should be done by health professionals, imo. Not teachers.
First and foremost I think this is a role for parents - schools afterall teach things parents can't.. we can asume that all parents have had sex at least once. Unfortunately we can't trust them to do a good job and so it falls to schools (like so many other things parents should handle).
I don't see what's wrong with schools doing it - if they do it right and if they do it early enough. These conversations need to start before children are sexually active, not after.