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New Florida sex education curriculum excludes almost all information about sex

67 comments
  • I used to think, 'oh, people against sex ed just don't understand the good things it does! Later first pregnancies, protection from abuse, std prevention...if they understood, of course they'd be on board!' Haha, oh younger me.

    I still do think there are lots of people who come around, if some source they trust reaches them, but I was mistaken to think certain other people were actually against child abuse and teenage pregnancy.

    • 30 .... shit 40 years ago when I was a kid ... sex education came from kids who were one or two years older than you ... hustler magazine and porn videos.

      I think I was about 20 before I properly understood what sex was and I had to learn it all on my own.

      • Freshman year of college, my friends group had to explain how stuff works to a member. She'd just gotten her first boyfriend and really needed The Talk.

        My mom handled things by just leaving out a copy of "What's Happening to My Body?", but then again, I was a very bookish child.

  • This is how we get crap like "soaking", can't wait for what ever ludicrous thing is next.

  • How long until they replace driving lessons with a page that says "not driving a car is the only 100% effective method to prevent car crashes"?

  • The old 8th grade sex education curriculum in Orange County, while promoting abstinence, acknowledged that some students are sexually active. It provided information on how to prevent unintended pregnancy and protect against STDs if students engaged in sexual activity. This information has been deleted from the new curriculum.

    The old Orange County 8th grade curriculum also included information about the various kinds of birth control, their efficacy, and whether or not they helped reduce the risk of STDs. This information has also been removed.

    In Orange County's new 8th grade curriculum, there are no descriptions of the different forms of birth control and no explanation of which forms of birth control are effective in preventing the transmission of STDs. This is a particularly important issue in Florida, which is currently "reporting more HIV diagnoses than almost any other state."

    These are the kinds of changes you get when you have people developing curriculum without actually understanding any of the evidence, and just going off vibes.

    "No sex = no pregnancy, surely the kids will understand and follow our instructions on this!"

    "No sex = no need for birth control, so why tell them about it?"

    It baffles me how stupid some members of our society can be.

67 comments