
If you are part of this 89% then you will want to become
familiar with BACHE (Bay Area Communities for Health Education). They have
released an online “Parent Toolkit” that includes 9 steps necessary to get
comprehensive sex-education implemented in your child’s school. The toolkit is
available on BACHE’s website at http://bacheinfo.org/Toolkit.
The information is enlightening and empowering. For example,
California law prohibits abstinence-only sex education in public schools. In
spite of this, there are many school districts in the Bay Area that are not
complying. Also, sex education in public schools must be science-based,
medically sound, free of bias and age-appropriate. As a parent, you have the
right to review all school materials relating to sex education, including any
books, pamphlets and other teaching aids used during instruction.
A comprehensive sex ed course should assist in formulating
healthier relationships and healthier decisions. If done properly, it should
include curriculum that incorporates decision-making skills, information about
condoms and contraception, and details about the benefits of delaying sexual
activity. All that being said, the best advice still comes from mom and dad.
According to a series of national surveys commissioned and
released by The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy,
teens continue to say that parents have the most influence on their decisions
about sex. The bottom line is, kids will learn about sex whether or not you
want them to, so you may want to begin asking them what they think and what
they already know and clear up any misconceptions.
Kids need as much help in understanding the meaning and
implications of sex as they do in understanding how all the body parts work.
And don’t worry, research clearly shows that talking with your children about
sex does not encourage them to become sexually active.
Being a parent can be the most demanding job in the world,
and is the most important. I think professor and educational author Dr.
Elizabeth Stone says it precisely right. “Making
the decision to have a child is momentous. It is to decide forever to have
your heart go walking around outside your body.”
Contact Margaret Lavin at elementarydays@gmail.com.