Parents of New York City school children didn't seem at first to be overly excited about the new mandatory sex ed curriculum for public middle and high schools. But the New York Post reviewed workbooks and material for the classes and came up with some stuff that one mom called “pretty outrageous.”
The Post singled out Columbia University's Go Ask Alice website, and the questions (and answers) there cover just about anything you can think of. And not just sexual things either. The website answers questions about things like unexplained bruises and weight loss, mental and emotional health, and of course sex. But it doesn't just stop at the usual questions about sex. Every question you could think to ask about sex.
The site discusses in detail the safety of eating poop, drinking urine and having oral sex. It talks about foot fetishes, drag queens and giving your girlfriend a spanking. Swinging, bestiality and nursing your partner are also discussed on the site, recommended to kids as young as 11 years old.
So far, parents aren't totally against the idea of their children learning about sex from the schools. They're perfectly aware that their kids are already learning the wrong things on the street. They're just wondering how far is too far?
The Post singled out Columbia University's Go Ask Alice website, and the questions (and answers) there cover just about anything you can think of. And not just sexual things either. The website answers questions about things like unexplained bruises and weight loss, mental and emotional health, and of course sex. But it doesn't just stop at the usual questions about sex. Every question you could think to ask about sex.
The site discusses in detail the safety of eating poop, drinking urine and having oral sex. It talks about foot fetishes, drag queens and giving your girlfriend a spanking. Swinging, bestiality and nursing your partner are also discussed on the site, recommended to kids as young as 11 years old.
So far, parents aren't totally against the idea of their children learning about sex from the schools. They're perfectly aware that their kids are already learning the wrong things on the street. They're just wondering how far is too far?
I don't see what the big hoopla about this new sex ed is. I think it is great!
I think kids gotta know somehow