• Goldholz @lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    There was a bit at 3rd grade “difference between boys and girls and where babys come from” (no no sex talk)

    In 5th grade I was absent in hospital but in 5th grade you learn sexual biologie, contraceptions, menstruation, puberty and i think STDs. When i got back from hospital it was mid way into the lessons about female genitalia and tampons so i didnt learn it from school but from books at home. I dont know if they talked about different sexualitys existing, if not this needs to change.

    7th grade has puberty and hormones, genetics, pregnacy and birth.

    I dont know what it was in 9th grade but there defenetly was also something that could fall under 'sex ed".

    It always was open, no shaming and professional

    Germany Bavaria. It is manditory and you cant take your child out of those classes because its part of the regular biologie class

  • hardcoreufo@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Maryland early 2000s. We had a real health teacher. It was pretty clinical and factual for the most part. The only thing that really stood out was the teacher telling us that peeing killed any sperm left in the urethra and a kid asking if he could “piss in his woman and not wear a condom.” This poor old teacher has to say “Do not piss in your woman.”

  • m4xie@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    Only what was on the biology national exam spec. Lots of hormone cycles of FSH and lutenising hormone, literally nothing outside the cervix.

  • Rose@slrpnk.net
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    5 hours ago

    I’m in Finland, in my 40s. I don’t remember much. I think in the early teens we did have lessons in school about sex and reproductive biology. What I do remember is the “real” sex education stuff around 15-16 years of age, that was part of the health education classes, because, well, I think it got inadvertently weird. The physical education / health education teacher we had was retiring that year. To no one’s surprise, the stuff in the textbook was left for us to read on our own. Because “ummm I don’t think I need to cover this, uhhh heh heh, ummm, you kids probably already know about this”. And everyone was, like, thank God we were spared of that.

  • TipRing@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Middle School (Mississippi): Basically all lies: having sex with a condom will give you AIDS, abortions are evil and most women who get them die of cancer or suicide. Even 6th grade me knew that shit was fucking wrong, but I was already on thin ice in that school for fucking up the curve, thank Homosexual Jesus that I was only there half a year.

    Junior High (New Jersey): Skip ahead to 9th grade. Sex-Ed was taught by a terrified gym teacher who was just adorable. This was pretty comprehensive, lots of biology and factual information. It was the early 90s so a big part of it was teaching how to avoid getting HIV, teaching both abstinence and condoms. Some mention of same-sex relationships, but when asked about the risk of HIV transmission from lesbian sex he blanched and said he didn’t know. No real fault here given the time period. They also taught various forms of birth control and other STIs. There was an undercurrent of promoting abstinence but also some pragmatic realism. In retrospect it could have been better, but compared to most of the country it was very good.

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    Mostly porn as a kid, then actual research on my own. Sucks that sex ed is so ignored

  • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 hours ago

    Texas: We had it three times. All three times were ineffectual or outright wrong.

    First was in 3rd grade (9 years old) where the boys and girls were split into different classrooms. This was mostly the “your body is going to change, your penis will sometimes get hard, you’ll get hair in new places, please for the love of god wear antiperspirant” talk. They didn’t really touch on the opposite sex at all in this one, except to vaguely say that the girls would also experience some changes of their own.

    Second was in middle school, probably 7th grade (13 years old). They marched us all into the gymatorium and had us sit on the floor in front of the stage. They brought in a dude who looked and acted a lot like a church youth leader. Very much the “hey kids, I’m the cool relatable teacher” type. This was an abstinence-only sex talk. We were told that condoms don’t prevent pregnancy or STIs, (“on the microscopic level, latex looks like Swiss cheese”), and can actually increase the risk of STIs in some cases by “sealing everything in”. We were told that women’s birth control is ineffective and probably shouldn’t even be legal to sell because of the horrible side effects. We were shown lots of gory and graphic images of sex organs in various states of disease or decay. This was basically the start of the “if you have sex you’re going to catch a ton of diseases and then die” messaging. We were told that the only safe way to have sex is to wait until after marriage.

    Then in high school, we had Health as a required elective. It could be taken anywhere from 9th to 12th grade (15-18 years old). The class was mostly focused on things like nutrition (using the very outdated food pyramid) and exercise (without any actual practical portions where we went to the gym). Sex ed in this class consisted of a single class session (~55 minutes) of more “if you have sex it’ll rot, and then you’ll die” messaging.

    Naturally, kids had a lot of unprotected sex, because teenagers are horny. They tried sex, realized they didn’t seem to get sick, and then kept having it. And they didn’t use protection, because they were told that condoms were ineffective. IIRC we had around a dozen girls get pregnant in high school. Also, all three sex talks were entirely heteronormative, with zero mention of LGBTQ+ stuff.

    Edit: My partner went to school in a neighboring town. They didn’t get the middle school talk, and Health was an optional elective for their high school. So the only one they actually got was the first talk in elementary school.

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      16 hours ago

      Seriously, to me this sounds like politically and religiously motivated child abuse. All of it. Lives were destroyed by this behavior, people should be jailed for this.

    • Case@lemmynsfw.com
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      18 hours ago

      Texan here as well.

      Yes, the sex education that was provided was horrible, probably still is.

      Thankfully, between the internet and other sources of factual information, most of us figured it out. Most.

      That being said, there were quite a few girls who left our campus for a long duration, and some for a shorter duration.

      Well, I was in a networking class and me and my friends were poking around the network.

      Now, what we did was in no way shape or form hacking.

      We navigated to the nurse’s computer, labeled for convenience, and started poking around. Open access to it. HIPPA information, etc.

      Anyways, the girls who left for a long time got knocked up, had a baby etc.

      The short timers were usually a combination of suspension and some STD.

      We missed the next period reporting the security concern to administration.

      We did not mention we were responsible for the network outage the previous month; but if a batch file placed in the autostart of a few computers can bring the school down, they deserved it. We just wanted to cause some chaos and blow off a day where we all had classes in computer labs.

  • SnarkoPolo@lemm.ee
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    17 hours ago

    Technical, but no mention of the social, psychological, or emotional aspects of sexuality.

    Female orgasm was literally never discussed or even spoken of. This was in the very conservative city of Anaheim, in very conservative Orange County, California.

  • Salt@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    It was pure abstinence only. Our teachers were only allowed to tell us not to have sex, and that was pretty much it. Never even saw a diagram of a vagina or a penis.

  • Kennystillalive@feddit.org
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    23 hours ago

    Switzerland:

    • We had it first when I was in 6th grade in biology. This was mostly here are your reproductive organs and here is what happens when you reproduce.

    • Second time was in 8th grade, here we had once again everything we had in primary school + a little more in-deph + including a little bit genetics & sexuall illnesses.

    • That year we also had a talk about consent, birth controll and struggles of teen pregnancy in houskeeping class.

    • Later that year we had STD prevention week, where they explained every known STD and their symptoms including images of the sympthoms+ showed interviews with people afected and the history of the STDs and how they are treated ect. (That was scary AF, but hey we got free condoms)

    • Later I moved to the Gymnasium and we had it once again but mostly focusing on genetics.

    Edit: this is where I lived in Switzerland and not for the whole country as in Switzetland every Kanton has their own school ecosystem)

  • hitagi@ani.social
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    1 day ago

    I remember in elementary school we had a lesson on sex organs. When I turned in my test paper, I curiously asked my teacher, “If the sperm is in the male, and the egg is in the female, how does the sperm transfer over?”

    All she said was, “Well, what do you think?” To which I replied, “I don’t know.” Then I quietly returned to my desk. Later I discussed it with my friend and we concluded that a male must pee into a female. Because at the time, pee was the only thing we knew came out of the penis.

  • stiephelando@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    My parents had bought a book on the subject to read to us kids. I got a hold of it first and read it by myself. When my dad brought me to bed, I “educated” him about where kids come from. It’s still one of my parents’ favorite stories about me as a kid.

    In school, sex ed was alright. They taught us everything we need to know incl. how to prevent STDs and pregnancies. The only thing I would criticize in hindsight is that they used giant test tubes (25cm) to teach us how to put on condoms. That made a lot of boys feel inadequate.

  • Moonweedbaddegrasse@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    In the UK in the 1970s we were shown cross sections of male and family reproductive organs and copied pages out of a textbook about the essential mechanics. I can’t remember any discussion or moral guidance in the slightest. But then at that point I was well into my ‘hedge porn’ stage so that’s how I really educated myself.

  • RagingRobot@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The school took us on a field trip to the hospital where they told us that if we have sex we will get aids and die.

    A nurse told us a horror story of a teenage mother who died and they showed us some fetuses in jars.

    This was in central FL in the 90s

    • blarghly@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      North Florida.

      We had some short, no nonsense discussion of what sex was, the fact that stis were a thing, and that was about it. And then some health class in my high school made extremely graphic displays of what your genitals would look like if you got stis (and they weren’t treated for years) that were left up all year for some reason