Sunday, April 28, 2013

Education Experts Say Use Porn in Teaching Sex Ed

Isn't this exactly what you'd expect in today's hedonistic culture?

Saying that children grow up amid a flood of pornography, Britain's Sex Education Forum is providing schools with recommendations of how to introduce "good pornography" to the classroom, starting in Kindergarten, in order to develop students' core values and to properly guide their (premarital) sexual experiences.


UPDATE 3/17/15 The educator chorus grows: Pornography Belongs in Classroom, More Experts Say

UPDATE 12/19/14: Teen Students Across America Learn to Produce & Distribute Child Pornography

UPDATE 8/9/14: California School Pushes Pornographic Sex Ed, Parents Outraged

UPDATE 6/13/14: Kinky Planned Parenthood Sex Advisor Caught, Fired

UPDATE 6/9/14: X-Rated Sex Ed for California 8th Grade; Parents Livid

UPDATE 6/4/14: Secret Sex Training of 6th-Graders in Oregon

UPDATE 2/26/14: Sex in New Jersey Kindergarten, Nobody Blames Culture

UPDATE 5/6/13: President Obama Funds Condom Delivery Service to Pre-teens

For background, click headlines below for previous articles:

Schools Give Sex Ed Porn to 4 year-olds

Kids Choose Porn as Better Teacher than School

School Sexualization Standards by NEA, Abortionists

Obama Education Adviser Recommends Pornography to Children

Children are Sexual Beings, Says White House - Masturbation OK

Government Teaches Children to Enjoy Sex - Daily Orgasms Recommended

Teen Sex Performance Education in New York

Sex Training Sweeps Campuses on Taxpayers' Dime

President Obama Enables Pornographers

Pornography Creates 5-year-old Sex Offenders

Also read about Planned Parenthood's Sexual Assault on Kids: Business Model is Hooking them on Sex

-- From "School pupils should be taught 'not all porn is bad', advise experts" by Melanie Hall and Graeme Paton, UK Telegraph 4/25/13

[The Sex Education Forum] suggests using a website called TheSite.org, an advice forum for young people, which tells teenagers that “porn can be great” and aims to tackle a series of “myths” about the subject. “Sex is great. And porn can be great. . . .

The publication follows the Government’s announcement that it will no longer include personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE), which is commonly used to deliver sex education lessons, in the National Curriculum. Instead, schools will be left to draw up their own syllabuses.

On Thursday the SEF released the first edition of the online publication Sex Educational Supplement — The Pornography Issue, which is intended to help schools teach sex education, providing resources on how to broach the “potentially difficult and controversial subject” of pornography.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Schools 'should teach how to view porn', sex forum says" by Judith Burns, BBC News education reporter 4/26/13

Teachers need to know that pornography is not necessarily 'all bad' and can sometimes be 'helpful', a group of sex education experts has suggested.

A new publication advocates pupils being taught how to view pornography in school sex education lessons.

The Sex Education Forum wants pornography taught in terms of "media literacy and representation, gender, sexual behaviour and body image".

. . . [Students of] Teacher Boo Spurgeon, of Forge Valley Community School in Sheffield . . . helped compile a list of what they felt students should learn about pornography. They said that some films could be "helpful" but cautioned that they were not a model for good sex.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Teachers should give lessons in pornography and tell pupils 'it's not all bad', experts say" by Mario Ledwith, UK Daily Mail 4/25/13

The recommendations, included in an educational guide, suggest that teachers confront 'myths' about porn and inform children as young as five about sexualisation.

The 'wish list' section, which aims to create the 'ideal environment' for teaching about sexual issues, also advises teachers to 'speak frankly and confidently' about pornography.

In a model lesson plan, it is suggested that children are told about the differences between what is 'real' and 'unreal' in pornography, using a device known as the 'planet porn game'.

The Family Education Trust's Norman Wells criticised the guide, saying: 'The intention appears to be to steer children and young people away from a belief in moral absolutes and to encourage them to think that there are no rights and wrongs when it comes to sexual expression.'

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Also read Abstinence Education Yields Lowest Teen Birth Rate Ever as well as Abstinent Teens the Norm, Moral Sex-Ed Works: Study

UPDATE 3/7/14: President Obama Wants an End to Abstinence Education, Favors Anal Sex