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<text id=93TT1772>
<link 93TO0118>
<title>
May 24, 1993: How Should We Teach Kids About Sex?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 24, 1993 Kids, Sex & Values
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER
SOCIETY, Page 60
How Should We Teach Our Kids about SEX?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Bombarded by mixed messages about values, students are more
sexually active than ever, and more confused
</p>
<p>By NANCY GIBBS--with reporting by Wendy Cole, Margaret Emery and Janice M. Horowitz/New
York, Lisa H. Towle/Raleigh and Marc Hequet/St. Paul
</p>
<p> Some ingredients in the steaming hormonal stew that is American
adolescence:
</p>
<p> For Prom Night last week, senior class officers at Benicia High
School in California assembled some party favors--a gift-wrapped
condom, a Planned Parenthood pamphlet advocating abstinence
and a piece of candy. "We know Prom Night is a big night for
a lot of people, sexually," senior Lisa Puryear told the San
Jose Mercury News. "We were trying to spread a little responsible
behavior." But administrators confiscated the 375 condoms, arguing
that the school-sponsored event is no place for sex education.
</p>
<p> Fifty students in Nashville, Tennessee, stand in front of a
gathering of Baptist ministers to make a pledge: "Believing
that true love waits, I make a commitment to God, myself, my
family, those I date, my future mate and my future children
to be sexually pure until the day I enter a covenant marriage
relationship."
</p>
<p> Tonya, 17, began having sex when she was 12, but rarely uses
a condom. "I know a lot of people who have died of AIDS," she
says, "but I'm not that worried." Every six months she gets
an AIDS test. "The only time I'm worried is right before I get
the results back."
</p>
<p> Last Wednesday the student leaders at Bremerton High in Seattle
voted that no openly gay student could serve in their school
government. The goal, they stated, was "to preserve the integrity
and high moral standards that BHS is built upon."
</p>
<p> Teenagers in York County, Pennsylvania, celebrate the Great
Sex-Out, a sex-free day to reflect on abstinence. Among activities
suggested as alternatives to sex are baking cookies and taking
moonlit walks. Since the event was held on a Monday, it wasn't
much of a problem. But Friday, said one student, "that would
be harder."
</p>
<p> Owen, 19, of Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, carries a key
chain bearing the inscription, A TISKET, A TASKET, A CONDOM
OR A CASKET.
</p>
<p> Just Do It. Just Say No. Just Wear a Condom. When it comes to
sex, the message to America's kids is confused and confusing.
The moral standards society once generally accepted, or at least
paid lip service to, fell victim to a sexual revolution and
a medical tragedy. A decade marked by fear of AIDS and furor
over society's values made it hard to agree on the ethical issues
and emotional context that used to be part of learning about
sex. Those on the right reacted to condom giveaways and gay
curriculums and throbbing MTV videos as signs of moral breakdown.
Those on the left dismissed such concerns as the rantings of
religious zealots and shunned almost any discussion of sexual
restraint as being reactionary or, worse yet, unsophisticated.
"Family values" became a polarizing phrase.
</p>
<p> Now, however, the children of the sexual revolution are beginning
to grapple with how to teach their own children about sex. Faced
with evidence that their kids are suffering while they bicker,
parents and educators are seeking some common ground about what
works and what doesn't. It is becoming possible to discuss the
need for responsibility and commitment without being cast as
a religious fanatic and to accept the need for safe-sex instruction
without being considered an amoral pragmatist.
</p>
<p> In one sense, the arrival of AIDS in the American psyche a decade
ago ended the debate over sex education. Health experts were
clear about the crisis: By the time they are 20, three-quarters
of young Americans have had sex; one-fourth of teens contract
some venereal disease each year. About 20% of all AIDS patients
are under 30, but because the incubation period is eight years
or more, the CDC believes a large proportion were infected with
HIV as teenagers.
</p>
<p> In such a climate of fear, moral debate seemed like a luxury.
Get them the information, give them protection, we can talk
about morality later. There is a fishbowl full of condoms in
the nurse's office, help yourself. While only three states mandated
sex ed in 1980, today 47 states formally require or recommend
it; all 50 support AIDS education.
</p>
<p> But as parents and educators watch the fallout from nearly a
decade of lessons geared to disaster prevention--here is a
diagram of female anatomy, this is how you put on a condom--there are signs that this bloodless approach to learning about
sex doesn't work. Kids are continuing to try sex at an ever
more tender age: more than a third of 15-year-old boys have
had sexual intercourse, as have 27% of 15-year-old girls--up from 19% in 1982. Among sexually active teenage girls, 61%
have had multiple partners, up from 38% in 1971. Among boys,
incidents like the score-keeping Spur Posse gang in California
and the sexual-assault convictions of the Glen Ridge, New Jersey,
jock stars suggest that whatever is being taught, responsible
sexuality isn't being learned.
</p>
<p> Beyond what studies and headlines can convey, it is the kids
who best express their confusion and distress. Audrey Lee, 15,
has taken a sex-education class at San Leandro High School in
California, but, she asserts, "there's no real discussion about
emotional issues and people's opinions." The program consists
mostly of films and slides with information on sex and birth
control. It lacks any give-and-take on issues like date rape
and how to say no to sexual pressure. "The school doesn't emphasize
anything," she says. "If you have a question, you go to your
friends, but they don't have all the answers." As for her family,
"sex is not mentioned."
</p>
<p> "Adults have one foot in the Victorian era while kids are in
the middle of a worldwide pandemic," complains pediatrician
Karen Hein, of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York
City, who has seen too many teens infected with HIV and other
sexually transmitted diseases come through her hospital. She
laments the fact that sex ed is only "about vaginas, ovaries
and abstinence--not about intimacy and expressing feelings."
Kids, she says, "don't know what they're supposed to be doing,
and adults are really not helping them much."
</p>
<p> America has long wrestled with the tension between its Puritan
and pioneer heritages, and its attitude toward sex has often
seemed muddled. Victorian parents, fearful of their children's
sexuality, would try to delay the onset of puberty by underfeeding
their children. By 1910 exploding rates of syphilis drove the
crusade for sex education in much the way AIDS does today. In
1940 the U.S. Public Health Service argued the urgent need for
schools to get involved, and within a few years the first standardized
programs rolled into classrooms. But by the 1960s came the backlash
from the John Birch Society, Mothers Organized for Moral Stability
and other groups. By the early '70s they had persuaded at least
20 state legislatures to either restrict or abolish sex education.
</p>
<p> "There's something wrong," sex educator Sol Gordon once said,
"with a country that says, `Sex is dirty, save it for someone
you love.' " But families at least agreed on a social standard
that preached, if not practiced, the virtues of restraint and
of linking sex to emotional commitment and marriage. "It used
to be easy to say it's just wrong to have sex before marriage.
You could expect churches to say that, adults from many walks
of life to somehow communicate that," notes Peter Benson, president
of Minneapolis-based Search Institute, a research organization
specializing in child and adolescent issues. "We went through
a sexual revolution since the '60s that poked a major hole in
that. And nothing has come along to replace it. What's responsible
sexuality now? Does it mean no sex unless you're in love? No
sex unless you're 21? No sex unless it's protected?"
</p>
<p> Nothing approaching a consensus has emerged to guide kids in
their decisions. A TIME/CNN poll of 500 U.S. teenagers found
that 71% had been told by their parents to wait until they were
older before having sex; more than half had been told not to
have sex until they were married. The teens were almost evenly
split between those who say it is O.K. for kids ages 16 and
under to have sex and those who say they should be 18 or older.
</p>
<p> Some social scientists argue that there is nothing wrong with
increased sexual expression among teens. "Feeling, thinking
and being sexual is an endemic part of being a teenager," says
UCLA psychologist Paul Abramson. "Let's say a couple has paired
off, wants to be monogamous and uses condoms. I'd say that's
a legitimate part of their sexual expression as a couple in
the '90s."
</p>
<p> There are many factors, besides increased permissiveness, that
make the trend toward increased casual sex among kids seem almost
inevitable. Since the turn of the century, better health and
nutrition have lowered the average age of sexual maturity. The
onset of menstruation in girls has dropped three months each
decade, so the urges that once landed at 14 may now hit at 12.
At the same time, the years of premarital sexual maturity are
much greater than a generation ago. The typical age of a first
marriage has jumped to 25, from 21 in the 1950s.
</p>
<p> School cutbacks and working parents have left teens with a looser
after-school life. Many use that time for afternoon jobs, but
less to pay for college than for a car, for freedom and the
chance to socialize more with peers, who may pressure each other
into ever greater sexual exploration. Sandra, 17, in Des Moines,
Iowa, pregnant and due in November, says she has slept with
33 boys. She keeps count and doesn't think her behavior is all
that unusual. "A lot of girls do the same. They think if they
don't have sex with a person, that person will not want to talk
to them anymore."
</p>
<p> In the inner cities the scarcity of jobs and hope for the future
invites kids to seek pleasure with little thought for the fallout.
"You'd think AIDS would be a deterrent, but it's not," says
Marie Bronshvag, a health teacher at West Side High School in
upper Manhattan. Their lives are empty, she observes, and their
view of the future fatalistic. "I believe in God," says student
Mark Schaefer, 19. "If he wants something bad to happen to me,
it will happen. Anyway, by the time I get AIDS I think they'll
have a cure."
</p>
<p> Nor is fear of pregnancy any more compelling. "The kids feel,"
says Margaret Pruitt Clark, executive director of the Center
for Population Options, "that the streets are so violent that
they are either gonna be dead or in jail in their 20s, so why
not have a kid." Most striking, she adds, is the calculation
that young women in the inner cities are making. "They feel
that if the number of men who will be available to them as the
years go on will be less and less, the girls might as well have
a child when they can, no matter how young they are."
</p>
<p> Finally, there is the force that is easiest to blame and hardest
to measure: the saturation of American popular culture with
sexual messages, themes, images, exhortations. Teenagers typically
watch five hours of television a day--which in a year means
they have seen nearly 14,000 sexual encounters, according to
the Center for Population Options. "Kids are seeing a world
in which everything is sensual and physical," says Dr. Richard
Ratner, who this week takes office as president of the American
Society for Adolescent Psychiatry. "Even in this era of feminism,
rap songs preach, `Take this bitch and f---her.' Everything
is more explicit. It's the difference between wearing a bathing
suit and walking around nude."
</p>
<p> The content of popular culture has been a favorite target among
politicians caught up in the culture wars, but kids themselves
have their own criticisms of what they see. Many recoil at the
sexual pressures they feel from Calvin Klein ads, MTV, heavy-breathing
movies, all the icy, staged or oddball sex they see in books
by Madonna and rock videos. "If you turn on TV, there's a woman
taking off her clothes," says Marcela Avila, a senior at Santa
Monica High, who was among a group of students who sat down
with TIME's Jim Willwerth to discuss the sexual landscape they
face. "It makes you doubt yourself. Am I O.K.? You put yourself
down--I'll never be able to satisfy a guy." Her classmate
Elizabeth Young agrees. "The media doesn't make it seem like
it's really about love," she says. "Nowadays sexuality is the
way you look, the way you wear your hair. It's all physical,
not what's inside you."
</p>
<p> Many kids, who can be lethal critics of the sexual mores of
their parents' generation, say they are offended that adults
have so little faith in them. "Not all teenagers have sex. They're
not all going to do it just because everyone else is," says
Kristen Thomas, 17, of Plymouth, Minnesota. "They kind of have
a lack of faith in us--parents and general society."
</p>
<p> Traditionally, it's been the role of parents to convey the messages
about love and intimacy that kids seem to be missing in their
education about sex. Although today's parents are the veterans
of the decade that came after free love and before safe sex,
that doesn't automatically make them any more able to talk about
sex with their children; if anything, the reverse may be true.
Hypocrisy is a burden they carry. "Do as I say," they instruct
their teenagers, "not as I did."
</p>
<p> As for those who sat out the sexual revolution, they may be
too embarrassed or intimidated to talk to teens--or afraid
of giving the wrong information. Phyllis Shea, director of teen
programs for the Worcester, Massachusetts, affiliate of Girls
Inc. (formerly Girls Clubs of America), recently ran a sex-education
workshop for 12 girls and their mothers. In many cases, she
says, mothers lag far behind their daughters in knowledge. Five
of the mothers had never seen a condom. A mother who had been
completely unwilling to discuss sex with her daughter told the
group that she had been molested as a child. On the way home,
she and her daughter drove around for two hours, deep in conversation.
</p>
<p> Of all the mixed messages that teenagers absorb, the most confused
have to do with gender roles. The stereotypes of male and female
behavior have crumbled so quickly over the past generation that
parents are at a loss. According to the TIME/CNN poll, 60% of
parents tell their daughters to remain chaste until marriage,
but less than half tell their sons the same thing. Kids reflect
the double standard: more than two-thirds agree that a boy who
has sex sees his reputation enhanced, while a girl who has sex
watches hers suffer.
</p>
<p> That is not stopping girls from acting as sexual aggressors,
however. Teenagers in TIME's survey say girls are just as interested
in sex as boys are--an opinion confirmed by recent research.
"My friends and I are a lot less inhibited about saying what
we want to do," says Rebecca Tuynman of Santa Monica High. "A
lot of the change is admitting that we like it." Tuynman says
that while she was taught that boys don't like girls who come
on too strong, her brother set her straight. "He said he'd like
it if girls came after him. I'll always be grateful to him for
saying that." Her classmate Tammy Weisberger notes that like
so many boy jocks, girls on her soccer team brag about whom
they've slept with--but with a difference. "The guys say how
many girls they did it with. With the girls, it's who they did
it with."
</p>
<p> For all the aggressive girl talk, some experts are worried that
what the sexual revolution has really done for teenage girls
is push them into doing things they may not really want to do.
"The irony is that the sexual revolution pressured girls into
accepting sex on boys' terms," argues Myriam Miedzian, author
of Boys Will Be Boys: Breaking the Link Between Masculinity
and Violence. "If they don't engage in sex, they're not cool.
At least under the old morality, girls had some protection.
They could say their parents would kill them if they had sex."
</p>
<p> As for boys, researchers are finding that among parents, the
fear that their son will grow up to be aggressively promiscuous
is nothing compared with the fear he will turn out to be gay.
Manhattan social worker Joy Fallek has seen boys who fear that
they might be gay if they haven't had sex with a girl by age
16. Parents have told Miedzian that they will not let their
boys watch TV's Mr. Rogers because of his gentle demeanor. "This
is a major barrier to parents' raising their sons to be caring
and sensitive people," she contends. "Other parents have told
me that they're afraid not to have their sons play with guns
because they'll grow up gay. And yet there's not the slightest
shred of evidence for this."
</p>
<p> Schools are attempting to fill in where parents have failed.
But it has been hard for educators over these past few years
to know what to teach when society itself cannot agree on a
direction. Absent any agreement over what is "proper" sexual
conduct, teachers can be left reciting, word for word, the approved
text on homosexuality or abortion or masturbation. The typical
sex-ed curriculum is remarkably minimalist. Most secondary schools
offer somewhere between 6 and 20 hours of sex education a year.
The standard curriculum now consists of one or two days in fifth
grade dealing with puberty; two weeks in an eighth-grade health
class dealing with anatomy, reproduction and AIDS prevention,
and perhaps a 12th-grade elective course on current issues in
sexuality.
</p>
<p> Joycelyn Elders, President Clinton's nominee for Surgeon General,
is leading the fight for a more comprehensive approach from
kindergarten through 12th grade. As head of the Arkansas health
department, she was one of the country's most outspoken advocates
of wide-ranging sex education. "We've spent all our time fighting
each other about whose values we should be teaching our kids,"
she complains. "We've allowed the right to make decisions about
our children for the last 100 years, and all it has bought us
is the highest abortion rate, the highest nonmarital birth rate
and the highest pregnancy rate in the industrialized world."
But Elders is no advocate of values-free instruction. "Proper
sex education would be teaching kids how to develop relationships
and about the consequences of their behavior. Kids can't say
no if they don't first learn how to feel good about themselves."
</p>
<p> But the issue of teaching kids about sex remains politically
explosive. This week the results are expected to be announced
in an unusually bitter election for New York City community
school boards in which the religious right joined with the Catholic
Church to try to elect more tradition-minded representatives.
Earlier this year, the system's highly regarded Chancellor Joseph
Fernandez was ousted largely because of his effort to expand
condom distribution and teach children about gay life-styles.
The New York City Board of Education last week chose as its
new president a conservative Queens mother who had cast the
deciding vote against the chancellor.
</p>
<p> If there is one point of agreement among all parties in the
debate, it is that sex education has to be about more than sex.
The anatomy lesson must come in a larger context of building
relationships based on dignity and respect. The message these
programs have in common: learn everything you want and need
to know, and then carefully consider waiting.
</p>
<p> Some of the most innovative and successful efforts have been
launched by private religious and social-service organi zations.
Girls Inc., with 165 chapters nationwide, launched Preventing
Adolescent Pregnancy (PAP) in 1985 to help low-income teens
avoid cycles of early pregnancy, poverty and hopelessness. The
first section, called Growing Together, invites girls ages 12
to 14 to talk over issues of sexuality with their mothers. The
second section, Will Power/Won't Power, is designed to help
girls develop strategies for postponing sexual activity and
preventing pregnancy. "It's our experience that kids this age
really know it's too early to be having sex," says Heather Johnston
Nicholson, director of the National Resource Center for Girls
Inc., in Indianapolis. "But when you're that age, you don't
want to be considered a complete dweeb. We're establishing a
peer group that says it's O.K. not to be sexually active."
</p>
<p> In the third segment, Taking Care of Business, 15- to 17-year-olds
are encouraged to focus on their goals. The final step, Health
Bridge, helps older teens establish ties with a community clinic
to ensure that they will have continued access to affordable
reproductive health care. "It gives kids an opportunity to think
through the reasons for not becoming sexually active," says
Nicholson. But she cautions that "this is not a Just Say No
program. When kids ask questions, they get straight answers.
While we're focusing on postponement, we're not doing it in
a context of fear and scare tactics."
</p>
<p> That approach distinguishes PAP from the more hard-line abstinence
programs that are gaining ground all across the country (see
box). While both types of programs are designed to help teens
make healthy decisions, there remains a fault line over whether
to include detailed information on contraception or to focus
on abstinence in a way that assumes that no lessons on applying
condoms will be necessary.
</p>
<p> At least a dozen abstinence-based curriculums are on the market;
one of the largest, Sex Respect, is used in about 2,000 schools
around the country. What Sex Respect does not include is standard
information about birth control, which prompts some critics
to charge that purely abstinence-based programs are inadequate.
Michael Carrera, who eight years ago founded a highly successful
teen-pregnancy-prevention program in Harlem, deplores the "ungenerous,
unforgiving" nature of some abstinence programs. "The way you
make a safe, responsible abstinent decision is if you're informed,
not if you're dumb." Carrera attributes the success of his program
to this more comprehensive approach: in a part of Manhattan
with a 50% dropout rate, 96% of Carrera's kids are still in
school.
</p>
<p> Trust Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the high priestess of pleasure, to
provide parents and teens with a middle ground. She has just
published Dr. Ruth Talks to Kids, in which she writes for ages
8 through 14. Her thesis: teach kids everything, and then encourage
them to wait. "Make sure even the first kiss is a memorable
experience, is what I tell kids,'' she says. "I don't think
kids should be engaging in sex too early, not even necking and
petting. I generally think age 14 and 15 is too early, in spite
of the fact that by then girls are menstruating and boys may
have nocturnal emissions."
</p>
<p> Above all, she says, kids need to have their questions addressed.
Learning and talking about sex do not have to mean giving permission,
she insists. "On the contrary, I think that a child knowing
about his or her body will be able to deal with the pressure
to have sex. This child can say no, I'll wait." In fact, Westheimer
is a big advocate of waiting. "I say to teenagers, What's the
rush?"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>