If It Weren't Public School Doing It
How are 11 year olds going to do oral and anal sex with old freaks right if they don't get taught in school?
Posted on | October 23, 2011 | 35 Comments and 19 Reactions
. . . what would you think about someone who wanted to talk to your 11-year-old about masturbation, anal sex, “doggie style” and how to perform oral sex if you’ve got braces? Welcome to New York City in 2012:
New York City 11-year-olds will soon be learning sex education from workbooks that include instruction on “mutual masturbation, French kissing, oral and anal sex, and “intercourse using a condom and an oil-based lubricant.”
The shocking revelations were uncovered in “recommended” workbooks reviewed by The New York Post. . . .
One of the preferred resources for students is Columbia University’s website, “Go Ask Alice,” the Post reported. That site includes discussions on topics ranging from “doggie-style,” oral sex with braces, fetishes, and “sadomasochistic sex play.”
The New York Post reports:
Starting in the spring, the DOE will require one semester of sex ed in sixth or seventh grades and one in ninth or 10th.
It says schools can pick any curriculum but recommends the widely used HealthSmart and Reducing the Risk programs and trains teachers to use them.
Seriously, if any random stranger tried to talk to kids about stuff that schools teach in sex-ed classes, parents would be calling the cops. It’s just downright creepy to teach this kind of stuff to sixth-graders.
Where’s Chris Hansen when we really need him?
theothermccain.com
Parent furor at bawdy sex ed City’s eye opening lessons By SUSAN EDELMAN
Last Updated: 8:03 AM, October 24, 2011
Posted: 11:55 PM, October 22, 2011
EXCLUSIVE
A New York City education will now cover readin’, ’ritin’ -- and rubbers.
Sex ed, which becomes mandatory in city middle and high schools next year, is meant to stem unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases among teens. But parents may be shocked by parts of the Department of Education’s “recommended” curriculum.
Workbooks reviewed by The Post include the following assignments:
* High-school students go to stores and jot down condom brands, prices and features such as lubrication.
* Teens research a route from school to a clinic that provides birth control and STD tests, and write down its confidentiality policy.
* Kids ages 11 and 12 sort “risk cards” to rate the safety of various activities, including “intercourse using a condom and an oil-based lubricant,’’ mutual masturbation, French kissing, oral sex and anal sex.
* Teens are referred to resources such as Columbia University’s Web site Go Ask Alice, which explores topics like “doggie-style” and other positions, “sadomasochistic sex play,” phone sex, oral sex with braces, fetishes, porn stars, vibrators and bestiality.
Told of the subjects her son could learn about, one Manhattan middle-school mom said, “They seem pretty outrageous.”
Shino Tanikawa, a SoHo mother of two daughters, including a high-school junior, also was taken aback.
“I didn’t know how much detail they would get,” she said.
But she added that many city kids learn about hanky-panky on their own.
Starting in the spring, the DOE will require one semester of sex ed in sixth or seventh grades and one in ninth or 10th.
It says schools can pick any curriculum but recommends the widely used HealthSmart and Reducing the Risk programs and trains teachers to use them.
The curriculum “stresses that abstinence is the best way to avoid pregnancy and STD/HIV,” the DOE said.
Lessons include role playing on resisting sexual advances and advice on “negotiating condom use” with a partner.
The DOE says parents have the right to exclude their kids from lessons on “methods of prevention.”
“Kids are being told to either abstain or use condoms -- that both are responsible, healthy choices,” said child and adolescent psychiatrist Miriam Grossman, author of “You’re Teaching My Child What?”
The DOE “relies on latex,” she said.
But Grossman argues that the books minimize the dangers that pregnancy can still occur with condom use, and that viruses such as herpes and HPV live on body parts not covered by a condom.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/parent_furor_at_bawdy_sex_ed_hdtJZVpYrFFtTZeVKMbGvN#ixzz1bhjT35es
.... Kevin Jennings Kevin Jennings 9 hours ago in reply to Adobe_Walls I am an excellent counselor for troubled teens. Like time I recommended a 16 year old boy (or maybe 15 year old) pick up strange men in public bus stop restrooms. What could go wrong?
[ In the interest of accuracy, Jennings only advised the kid to use a rubber when he got picked up by nasty perverts in bus stop bathrooms. ] |