Parents: When you bought your children's new school supplies,
did you make sure you had everything?
I mean, judging from the sex-education programs in place in many
schools, you need more than just pencils, folders and notebooks. A
trip to the "family planning" aisle of your local drugstore might
be in order.
Seems inappropriate, doesn't it? After all, shouldn't our schools
be teaching students to abstain from sex, rather than instructing
them in the proper use of condoms?
If you answered yes, you're not alone.
According to a Zogby International poll taken last year, an
overwhelming majority of parents want their children to hear a
strong message of abstinence. Nearly 80 percent of parents want
teens to be taught that they shouldn't engage in sex until they are
married or at least in an adult relationship leading to marriage.
And more than 90 percent say schools should teach teens "to abstain
from sexual activity during high-school years."
Unfortunately, many schools aren't teaching abstinence. They're
teaching something called "abstinence plus" or claiming their
programs are "abstinence-based." It must be a case of new math,
though, because the so-called "plus" actually subtracts from the
abstinence message.
To prove that, analysts here at The Heritage Foundation recently
completed
a study comparing traditional abstinence programs with those
known as abstinence-plus.
On average, authentic abstinence curricula devote more than half of
their content to abstinence-related material. That is, information
that encourages children to wait until they're married before they
start having sex. In addition, these curricula use another 17
percent of their content to promote healthy relationships and to
explain the benefits of marriage. Those messages both directly
reinforce the main theme of teen abstinence.
But the "abstinence-plus" curricula take the opposite approach. On
average, they devote less than 5 percent of their content to the
topic of abstinence. And they do nothing to promote healthy
relationships and marriage. Instead, these curricula focus on
encouraging young people to use contraception.
The problem is that abstinence-plus curricula largely depict human
sexuality as something that's merely a physical process. They focus
on the physical body, not the whole person, and their predominant
goal is to reduce the level of "unprotected" sexual activity by
encouraging young people to use contraception. Thus, they teach
students how to use condoms and coach them on how they can convince
a resistant sex partner to use condoms.
After all that, any abstinence message that's tossed in is sure to
get lost.
True abstinence programs, by contrast, address the student's whole
person. They teach that sex has not just physical effects, but
emotional, mental and psychological consequences, so students
should wait until they're in a stable, adult relationship -- i.e.,
marriage -- to begin having sex. By waiting, they're guaranteed to
avoid out-of-wedlock pregnancy, STDs and all the other risks of
early sexual activity.
And this approach works. Study
after study shows that genuine abstinence education reduces teen
sexual activity. That's why it's especially upsetting that the
government is spending roughly $12
promoting contraceptive use for every $1 it spends promoting
abstinence.
Early sexual activity leads directly to many social problems. The
rate of sexually transmitted disease infection among teens is
increasing. Teen pregnancy and out-of-wedlock births remain
significant problems. Plus, studies prove that teenaged
sexual activity is linked to emotional problems and depression.
There is also widespread concern that casual sexual activity at an
early age can lead to unstable relationships and marital failure
later in life.
Parents know all this instinctively and know that teaching our
children to wait is the only way to avoid these problems. So,
parents: Do you know which version of sex ed is being taught in
your child's school this year? Is it the one that works, or the one
that doesn't? Maybe it's time to find out.
Ed Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based public policy research institute.