Here are some statistics that may startle you – almost one in three Australian teenagers have had sexual intercourse without a condom by the time they reach year 12.
Up to 500,000 Australians are estimated to have chlamydia and not even know it.
So it was a concern when sexual health advocates declared the draft national curriculum on sex education a ”dreadful attempt” at teaching sexual health in high schools when it was first released late last year.
The curriculum, which is still in its draft stages, has been criticized for allowing schools to simply side step any sexual health issues they feel uncomfortable with.
In Australia a survey last year asked 1,219 young Australians between the ages of 15 and 29 about their formal and informal sex education.
85% said they gained information from the internet while only 69% got information from their school.
64% said they learnt about sex from pornography.
More than 80% of these young people thought that sex-ed should be the same in every school.
The concern for many Australian parents is that if young people do not get the education they need at school they will turn to the internet.
Sex educators are worried that our curriculum will not do enough to counteract the rise of sexting and pornography and will lead to a generation of young men and women with unrealistic attitudes towards sex – and a generation of young men with dangerous attitudes towards girls.
Top Comments
At my highschool this is around 2005 the idea of sex education was teaching us to be able to name Sti's and that was it. No discussion on sex or anything and considering that my year group had an issue where 10 girls were selling themselves at Darling Harbor for $50 a blow job (teachers knew of it) no one thought to give us the talk. But then again its the parents job to say something too
The problem is that some of the religious schools that don't teach about contraception using the moral argument are assuming that married couples dont use contraception.