Sex education at school Children sitting in classrooms nationwide are receiving sex education. The theme is books, videos, special lecturers, and qualified teachers. Depending on where the child lives, the education he or she receives may change. For example, in Wyoming, North Dakota, Minnesota, Maine, Utah, schools do not require gender education or STD / AIDS education (they educate abstinence). On the other hand, it is necessary to include condoms and condoms (Innerst) in the District of Columbia.
Sex education at public schools is a controversial issue in the United States for over 10 years. As the crisis of HIV and teen pregnancies increases, sex education is needed. I believe that sex education should be educated by parents at home in some Americans. They believe that school sex education programs do not emphasize abstinence and encourage children to sexual intercourse. American culture is very focused on sexual orientation. - Controversy over national high school students' nature of sex education is rising. 81% of American adults support not only the abstinence program but also the joint program of abstinence and contraception (Roper 0316946), 79% support contraception education regardless of the level of sexual activity in youth doing. The sad truth is that contraception is a social attempt to "solve a much more serious problem" than a sexual behavior of puberty "quickly".
Sex education at public schools in the United States is mainly abstinence. According to the Guttmacher Institute funded by family planning bodies claiming to promote health and rights relating to sex and reproduction, the laws of 19 states obligate education at the public school for asceticism. The Gutmacher Institute also reports that 29 states do not require sex education at all and that 37 states do not need a sex education course in order to be medically accurate. This means that the majority of American students do not receive formal sex education; they rely on their parents to teach them and what they learned from the Internet . Many of the students receiving sex education at school receive inaccurate information about their bodies.