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z0wb13
Guest
the study is here, if you are interested. i took the time to read through it, and i would still disagree that abstinence only programs are a panacea. but here is what the authors of the study say:lifenews.com/2010/02/01/nat-5950/ - this study is from 2010.
the results do not mean that abstinence-only intervention is the best approach or that other approaches should be abandoned.
further: The limitations of this trial should also be considered. The data were based on self reports, which can be inaccurate because of the failure of memory or socially desirable responding.
so after reading the study, i can tell you that it isn’t so clear cut. what the researchers found out was that all types of sex ed instruction reduce the likelihood that 12 to 14 year olds will have sex. the good news here seems to be that abstinence only programs don’t seem to have an effect on condom use.
another thing to consider is that the program wasn’t an “abstinence-until-marriage” program, and that besides discussing reasons why teens shouldn’t have sex, it also offered comprehensive sexual instruction including condom use and std information. "[The study] was not designed to meet federal criteria for abstinence-only programs. For instance, the target behavior was abstaining from vaginal, anal, and oral intercourse until a time later in life when the adolescent is more prepared to handle the consequences of sex. The intervention did not contain inaccurate information, portray sex in a negative light, or use a moralistic tone. The training and curriculum manual explicitly instructed the facilitators not to disparage the efficacy of condoms or allow the view that condoms are ineffective to go uncorrected.
i agree that suspension for an aspirin might be overkill, but then again, in every school i’ve seen, students have to sign a zero-tolerance contract that says they won’t bring anything to school. if a kid needs an aspirin, or any other other medication, they are supposed to go to the nurse. if a student is caught using condoms at school, they are probably going to be expelled.Also, the schools should have a firm line on what they are willing to teach. Being that a student can be suspended for taking an aspirin on their own, why is it okay for them to hand out condoms and show teens how to use them? That’s like giving people guns and bullets and saying “if you want to know how dangerous guns can be, read this pamphlet, but let’s focus on the fun aspects of the shooting range.”
but the analogy to condoms being like loaded guns i think is way off-base. plus, there are a ton of colorful comments that spring to mind, so i should probably just leave it alone;p but handing someone a pamphlet isn’t really comprehensive instruction, so no it’s not anything like what you are describing. for instance, in the study that we are discussing, the students all went through an 8 or 12 hour program, and both reduced the incidents of stds.
schools can promote abstinence, and honestly i agree that 12 years old is too early to be having sex. but what you are suggesting has been shown to be completely ineffective. it isn’t a morality issue, it just doesn’t work. the study that you linked too didn’t use the kind of instruction that you are suggesting, so the point is moot. and furthermore, i don’t think that the problem is children being too uncomfortable or incurious to discuss sex with their parents. it is probably more likely that the parents are uncomfortable, and that they have no training or instruction to offer outside of their own experiences. a sex ed instructor will know more about up-to-date information than almost any parent, barring your parent(s) being an OBGYN.Let the schools teach abstinence, and let the parents step in and talk about any topics the kids may be curious about. I’m not sure when the public education system became the answer for any uncomfortable topic, but if children are afraid to talk to their parents about sex, are they really mature enough to be making decisions about it?
if you are actually interested in the topic, here is an interesting site and a quote: Abstinence-only-until-marriage as a method of birth control is spectacularly ineffective. Like other methods, abstinence-only-until-marriage works if ‘used’ consistently and correctly. Common sense as well as available research, suggests that in the real world, it can and does fail routinely – as evidenced by the staggering proportion (95 percent) of Americans who have had premarital sex.