This Is What Sex Ed Looks Like Across the Country

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Do you remember your high school sex education? Did you cringe over a video of a live birth? Wince at images of untreated STIs? Giggle while sliding a condom over a banana?

Or perhaps you didn’t even have sex ed.

If that’s the case, you’re not alone. According to the Guttmacher Institute, only 24 states and the District of Columbia currently mandate sex education in public schools. Only 13 states require what’s taught to be medically accurate.

And unfortunately, what is taught isn’t always enough. A 2014 study found that fewer than half of all high schools were covering the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s “critical sex education components,” which includes STI prevention and decision-making skills.

The CDC isn’t the only organization recommending more sex ed than kids get. In 2007, researcher Doug Kirby identified 17 characteristics of sex ed programs that were shown to be effective in preventing STIs and unintended pregnancy. That list includes a curriculum with clear health goals (like preventing pregnancy) with a narrow focus on the behavior (like using contraception) that could lead to that goal. Comprehensive sex education programs like the 3Rs curriculum created by Advocates for Youth aim to incorporate all of these methods. Most sex education programs in U.S. schools do not.

Comprehensive sex ed includes not just anatomy, but information on healthy relationships, personal safety, contraception, sexual orientation, sexually transmitted infections, and more.

Here, we break down what sex ed curriculums across the country currently look like for students, through their content in four main subject areas: sexual wellness, reproductive health, sexual orientation and gender identity, and consent and communication.

Sexual Wellness

Rates of sexually transmitted infections have been shown to be higher in areas with abstinence-only programs. According to a 2010 study published in the International Journal of AIDS and STDs that compared chlamydia and gonorrhea infection rates across the U.S.:

States with no mandates for abstinence had the lowest mean rates of infection among the overall population and among adolescents. States with mandates emphasizing abstinence had the highest rates; states with mandates to cover (but not emphasize) abstinence fell in between.

Reproductive Health

A lack of comprehensive state-mandated sex education can easily lead to misinformation from outside groups. Where funding for sex ed isn’t available, the education arms of “crisis pregnancy centers” that are frequently run by religious organizations often offer free abstinence-only programming for public schools. Only two states prohibit sex ed from promoting specific religions, so in the 16 states where abstinence-only education is stressed and medically-accurate information is not required, there is ample space for religious organizations to offer up their services.

These obstacles to education further the cycle of poverty that puts teens at higher risk for pregnancy in the first place. According to a 2019 study published in Pediatrics, one in five women don’t use birth control when they begin having sex. Women in low-income areas are much less likely to have access to birth control, leaving sexually active youth who lack the funds or family insurance without any support.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, states with abstinence-only sex education are also frequently states where abortion access is threatened. Ten of the fourteen states where so-called “fetal heartbeat” bills have been introduced to ban abortion this year require abstinence to be stressed whenever sex education is taught. Three other states require abstinence be covered as part of the program, and don’t mandate medical accuracy.

Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

Only nine states require sex education to be inclusive of LGBTQ students…

Programs focused specifically on cisgender heterosexual relationships and their risks leave both queer and trans kids confused and uninformed at best, and at-risk and discriminated against at worst.

A study by the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) found that schools in states with so-called “no promo homo” laws were less likely to educate staff about issues faced by LGBTQ youth. The GLSEN study also found that outside of sex ed, “no homo promo” state schools were less likely to include LGBTQ representation in other subjects overall, but more likely to teach negative representations of LGBTQ people.

Encouragement, acceptance, and exploration saves lives, both in and out of the classroom. According to a review of 42 peer-reviewed studies conducted by Cornell University, LGBTQ youth have a heightened risk of low self-esteem, depression, and suicidality, and that “rejecting behaviors by parents can increase these risks, including contributing to far higher levels of suicidal behavior and depression.”

Consent and Communication

 A 2018 study on whether or not receiving sex ed before college could protect students from sexual assault while in college found that, though multiple factors “were associated with experiencing sexual assault in college,” education is a powerful tool:

Our analyses also showed that having received formal education about how to say no to sex formal education about how to say no to sex (refusal skills training) before age 18 was a protective factor against penetrative sexual assault in college; it is important to note that the vast majority of those who received instruction in refusal skills also received other forms of sexual education.

Source: https://www.esquire.com/lifestyle/sex/a27663524/sex-edcuation-in-america-state-by-state-1559243998/

Analysis:

I included this resource because it offers a great snapshot into the current state of sex education in the U.S. Currently, there is no standardized approach to sex education across the U.S. and this is proving harmful to our youth. Sex Education needs to be comprehensive and accessible to all students. This article poses the problem, how can sex education be made accessible to all when there are no policies in place to promote it?

1 COMMENT

  1. Hi Leila, I completely agree with you about the need for Sex Ed being more comprehensive. I think the article touched on it a bit, but California is the only state that requires consent education from what I understand. That’s startling. We should definitely include consent and LGBTQ topics into our work, as there is not much representation of these topics as pointed out by the article.