A bathroom conversation I accidentally eavesdropped on last week made me have another college epiphany: sex education needs to be implemented at a higher education level. After I listened to a conversation where a girl actually told her friend that she's worried she's pregnant because her boyfriend "let it go, when he was in the back," led me to believe Valley needs sex-ed. Since sex is a normal healthy part of human life, sexual education should be as well, and shouldn't stop in high school.
"I could see where sex-ed is a good idea, a lot of people are dumb," commented Valley student Gayane Gyulakopyan.
When most people think of sex-ed classes, they think of giggly embarrassed tweens and teens, but sexual education has evolved into so much more. Adults need to have sexual education that talks about real adult problems. According to recent studies done by Planned Parenthood, half of all people will have contracted a sexually transmitted infection by the age of 25, so college is a great place to host sexual education classes.
"I do believe that adults need (sexual) education; things change, bodies change and you need to take a refresher, even I need one," said Delta Brown, nurse at Kaiser Permanente, Sunset.
Sexual education for adults is becoming a more common concept. The program that is receiving the most notoriety is Our Whole Lives (OWL): Sexual Education for Adults. This program is run by the Unitarian Universalist Association and United Church of Christ, and has been featured by Oprah and several websites now dedicated to ongoing sexual education for adults, including Feministing.com, Oprah.com, OralCarress.com, and for younger adults: Scarleteen.com. The Owl program deals with real life adult issues such as "what to do when the condom breaks, life after sexual infection, and how to orgasm…for real. These are all things that students, being mature adults, need to know.
Sexual education in college should be offered outside of health class. There are many programs, such as OWL, Planned Parenthood, El Proyecto Del Barrio, PACT and the North East Valley Health Corporation that would be willing to offer free or low-cost sex education. Valley could hold a day of sexual awareness and hand out some condoms, but sex-ed needs to continue past the ninth grade.




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