Abstinence education critic says instruction doesn't 'go far enough'
Another Florida school district is planning to give its 6th-graders
lessons in how to use contraceptives, starting in April, a move that
Planned Parenthood is promoting in the state.
WND earlier reported when the St. Lucie school board adopted a sex-ed
curriculum that included a field trip to buy condoms, although district
officials there decided not to use that lesson after parents objected.
Now officials in Palm Beach County have decided to teach their
6th-graders the use of contraceptives such as condoms, according to a
report in the Palm Beach Post.
"Florida is the sixth-highest in the nation for pregnant teens, and
that tells us we need to get information to our students," Judy Klinek,
who oversees health education for the district, told the newspaper.
Since Florida law requires abstinence-based education, 6th-graders in
the past have learned about sexually transmitted diseases and taught
how to resist pressure to engage in sexual behavior, the report said
Now, however, students will get "detailed" lessons in contraceptives, a
move that is part of a larger effort to make such lessons mandatory
statewide.
"[The Florida Planned Parenthood abortion providers are] proud to work
with Sen. Ted Deutch, D-30, and Rep. Dorothy Bendross-Mindingall,
D-109, to introduce the Healthy Teens Act (SB 848, HB 449) during the
2008 Legislative session," the groups' website said. "The Healthy Teens
Act protects Florida's teens by requiring that public schools receiving
state funding provide comprehensive, medically accurate, and
age-appropriate factual information when teaching about sexually
transmitted infections." The website specifically listed AIDS and
pregnancy among those "sexually transmitted infections."
"One of the lessons … gives tips on how to store and use condoms and
encourages teachers to invite a medical professional to demonstrate
their use. Students also will be told where to get more information on
contraceptives," the newspaper report about Palm Beach County said.
The changes are being installed, officials reported, because they
believe introducing children to contraceptives and their use will
impact the county's rates for teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted
diseases.
The health department said births by mothers 19 or younger totaled 462
in 2004 and 506 in 2006.
Jean Malecki, the health department chief, has been a lead critic of
the schools' sex education program, because "it did not go far enough."
"We need to get the facts out," Marsha Fishbane, the health
department's director for school health, told the newspaper.
There's been no controversy yet over the plan to introduce pre-teens to
contraceptives and add a "comprehensive sex education to elementary
schools."
Officials also noted Deutch's campaign to revamp sex education
statewide would make such "comprehensive" lessons mandatory for
children statewide.
WND also reported on similar issues in Montgomery County, Md., where
school officials launched a new sex ed program that teaches students
that homosexuality is innate, which conflicts with state law there
requiring that such programs be based on facts.
That case remains under study by the Thomas More Law Center for
possible further legal challenges.
WND also covered the issue when officials in Boulder, Colo., held a
seminar for students in which they were told to "have sex," including
same-sex experiences, and "take drugs."
Another school event promoted homosexuality to students while banning
parents, and at still another, WND reported school officials ordered
their 14-year-old freshman class into a "gay" indoctrination seminar
after having them sign a confidentiality agreement promising not to
tell their parents.
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Condom lessons for 6th-graders approved
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