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    smarter learning

    Ignorance isn't bliss: Health groups propose first-ever national standards forsex education

    Leila Kalmbach
    Mar 11, 2012 | 4:10 pm

    Texas school districts have long adhered to an “ignorance is power” approach to sex education, but now, four leading national health organizations are hoping to change that.

    In January, the American Association of Health Education, the American School Health Association, the National Education Association Health Information Network and the Society of State Leaders of Health and Physical Education, working with the Future of Sex Education (FoSE) Initiative, joined together to release the first-ever national standards in sex education.

    The goal of the standards “is to provide clear, consistent and straightforward guidance on the essential minimum, core content for sexuality education that is developmentally and age-appropriate for students in grades K-12,” according to the report.

     

      There have been national standards in core subjects and even health education for years, but standards have never been proposed specifically for sex ed.

    It’s about time.

    The standards include information about seven topics: Anatomy and physiology, puberty and adolescent development, identity, pregnancy and reproduction, sexually transmitted diseases and HIV, healthy relationships and personal safety. In other words, it’s not all insert-tab-A-into-slot-B; by the end of eighth grade, for instance, students should be able to “analyze the ways in which friends, family, media, society and culture can influence relationships.”

    Important stuff in a nation where over 750,000 teens become pregnant each year.

    There have been national standards in core subjects and even health education for years, but standards have never been proposed specifically for sex ed. Many experts believe this is an important first step in making sure kids around the country are getting the education they need.

    Let’s be clear: These new standards are not going to revolutionize the way sex education is approached around here. The standards are suggestions, not government mandates, and school districts have no obligation to comply with them. They may, however, provide an important benchmark against which districts can compare their curriculum.

    And in Texas, many districts will see huge gaps between the recommendations and their current practices.

    Texas is known nationwide both for its "let’s-just-pretend-it-doesn’t-exist" approach to teen sexuality and its high rates of teen pregnancy, which is probably just a giant coincidence, if Rick Perry is to be believed. This approach stems from 1995 legislation passed when Dubya was governor, stating that Texas districts can teach sex education if they wish, but they must devote equal or greater time to promoting abstinence as to discussing methods of contraception — if contraception is discussed at all.

    Districts are also required to teach typical use rates rather than perfect use rates — for example, that condoms are only 81 percent effective rather than 96 percent, since some people who claim they use condoms kinda sorta forget sometimes and — surprise! — get pregnant.

    As of 2007, a full 96 percent of Texas districts were still teaching only abstinence-based sex education, according to the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund. Many of these programs include medically inaccurate information and have not been tested to confirm that they have an effect on rates of teen pregnancy or STIs.

     

      Texas is known nationwide both for its "let’s-just-pretend-it-doesn’t-exist" approach to teen sexuality and its high rates of teen pregnancy, which is probably just a giant coincidence, if Rick Perry is to be believed.

    Over the last few years, however, more and more districts are facing the fact that 63 out of 1,000 teenage females in Texas give birth every year, and that no matter how often they push abstinence, it’s not enough. By 2010, 25 percent of districts were using “abstinence-plus” programs, which pair the “abstinence is awesome” message with information about condoms and other forms of birth control.

    And those districts are finding that comprehensive sex education not only reduces rates of teen pregnancy, but also results in teens waiting longer to start having sex.

    Conservative publication The New American has criticized the standards, saying:

     

    Included in the new standards are the recommendations that second-graders master the ‘proper names for body parts, including male and female anatomy.’ By the fifth grade, students should know that sexual orientation is the ‘romantic attraction of an individual to someone of the same gender or a different gender.’ Similarly, eighth-graders should know the difference between ‘gender identity, gender expression, and sexual orientation,’ in a hard-core effort to get them to accept homosexuality and ‘transgender’ behavior as normal sexual expression. At the same time, they should also become familiar with the ‘morning after’ emergency contraception pill (a known abortifacient), as well as learn how to use a condom.”

    The fact that the author mistakenly refers to emergency contraception as abortion seems like a great argument for comprehensive sex education. That aside, though, it’s true that the standards recommend teaching students about homosexuality and gender identity in an effort to curtail the sexual bullying that nine out of 10 LGBT students experience, and that inclusion seems like evidence that our nation is moving in a healthier direction regarding sex education.

    Hopefully Texas will follow.

    unspecified
    news/city-life

    Flood Response

    $30M+ Hill Country flood relief fund announces first phase of aid awards

    Brianna Caleri
    Jul 11, 2025 | 2:30 pm
    Death Toll Rises After Flash Floods In Texas Hill Country
    Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images
    The Central Texas community has come together in huge numbers to grieve and offer support.

    When the floods in Central Texas started over July 4 weekend, it didn't take long for the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country to put an important call out for aid. In fact, it created the Kerr County Flood Relief Fund on the first Friday of the tragedy, which quickly became the default recipient of donations from locals and businesses. On July 11, the foundation made its first major announcement regarding how funds will be distributed.

    During a press conference, the foundation announced it has received more than $30 million so far. Top donors included H-E-B, which contributed $2 million in addition to sending its disaster relief convoy, and James Avery Artisan Jewelry, which is based in Kerrville and donated about $500,000.

    “The heartbreak we’ve experienced as a community is profound, but so is the response,” said Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country CEO Austin Dickson. “In a matter of days, thousands of donors from across Texas and beyond have stepped up to say: we are with you. This is a moment of collective grief, but also of extraordinary love.”

    The foundation is dividing its response into five phases, which include an initial phase of financial assistance and an end phase of longterm recovery, with more detailed logistics in between. The first phase starts with $5 million in emergency grants to nonprofits. Those nonprofits will then further distribute funds as they see fit. Priorities are divided into four categories of $1.25 million each: support of individuals and families, local businesses, first responders, and crisis response.

    There are 22 allocations on the full list, with some entities receiving grants in multiple categories. The full list includes the Salvation Army Kerrville Kroc Center, Mercy Chefs, World Central Kitchen, five volunteer fire departments, LiftFund, the Kerrville Area Chamber of Commerce, Schreiner University, Kerrville Pets Alive!, Freeman Fritts (Vet Clinic and Shelter), Arcadia Live Theater, Ingram ISD, five churches, and Christian outreach organization Light on the Hill.

    The fund is still open to donations, and the foundation plans to form a Community Advisory Committee that would seek the advice of local nonprofit leaders, residents, and other "stakeholders" regarding long-term recovery and equity.

    “We know this is just the beginning,” Dickson said. “We’re grateful to say we’ve raised over $30 million in just one week — but the needs are tremendous, and continued support will be critical in the months ahead. Recovery will take months, if not years, but we are committed to walking every step of this journey with the communities we serve. We will listen, we will learn, and we will continue to act with compassion, urgency and accountability.”

    charitydisaster relieffirst respondersflood reliefgrantshill countryhill country floodskerr countynatural disasternonprofitsjuly 4 floods
    news/city-life
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