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Is it Time to 'Promote' Sex in Schools?
According to this article, since 1997 the Jamaican public has been at odds
over the issues of sex
education and the distribution of contraceptives
in schools. Most parents
and teachers still believe that the distribution
of contraceptives will
promote sexual activity among young people.
This editorial, in the "TeenAge" section of The
Jamaica Observer, argues that sex-education and
contraceptives are needed in schools and that
students themselves are calling for this change.
The focus of the argument is that prohibiting
distribution of condoms in school and lack of
sex education are not deterrents to student
sexual activity, as shown by teen pregnancy
rates and HIV/AIDS infection rates.
The article recommends sex education infused in
the curriculum of primary and secondary schools
and a national programme to issue contraceptives
to those secondary school students who are at
risk of having unprotected sex. It calls on the
government to enforce the Child Care and
Protection Act, including mandatory reporting of
crime and regulations for a Children's Registry.
The Pop Reporter, Volume 6, Number 42, October 23 2006.
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