Mon, 1 Aug 2005
Sex Survey Shocks Dad; Another
Jailed Over Kindergarten Materials


In-your-face sex education continues to infuriate parents around the country, as
shown by the following recent conflicts between families and public schools:
A Shrewsbury, MA school passed out a sex survey to 11- and 12-year-olds in May,
asking them, among other things, how many oral sex partners they have had. Officials
defended the questionnaire as a vital way to stay informed of health risks. Parent
Mark Fisher was not amused.

"This is not something for the schools," he complained. "It seems like parents are
purposely kept in the dark about this." He did not allow his daughter to take the
survey and asked the school to adopt a policy to have parents opt in rather than opt
out of the survey.

Parents were allowed to view the survey ahead of time, but not to take a copy home
to review before their children answered it. (bostonherald.com, 5-26-05)

According to the American Family Association, the survey also solicits answers to
such questions as "How old were you when you had sexual intercourse for the first
time?" and "The last time you had sexual intercourse, did you or your partner use a
condom?" A similar sex survey being administered to 8th-graders asks students to
identify themselves as heterosexual, gay or lesbian, or bisexual.

CDC survey involved
The Shrewsbury questionnaire reportedly was administered as part of the national
Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System established by the federal Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) in 1990. The CDC version includes seven questions about sex,
covering such topics as age of first intercourse and condom usage.

However, participating schools are able to add or subtract questions, and that may be
what happened in the case of the Shrewsbury questions about oral sex and sexual
preference. The Shewsbury school has refused to release its version of the
questionnaire for public viewing. (foxnews.com, 6-23-05)

Condoms handed out
Middle school students in Wausau, WI were handed condoms by an AIDS education
group at a health fair in May. Organizers and teachers stopped the handouts once they
realized what was happening, and the AIDS education center apologized. (local20.
com, 5-11-05)

A Lexington, MA father spent a night in jail in April to protest school materials and
discussions about gay-headed households in his son's kindergarten class. After
repeated written requests for advance notice and "opt-out" accommodation, David
Parker said he was "flat-out denied" any accommodation by school officials.

During a meeting to discuss his requests, he "insisted that such accommodation be
made and refused to leave the meeting room." School officials called police, who
arrested him for "trespassing." He declined to bail himself out of jail.

The dispute began when Parker's 5-year-old son brought home a bag of books
promoting diversity, including Who's In a Family by Robert Skutch, which depicts
different kinds of families including same-sex couples raising children.

Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, an opponent of same-sex marriage, noted that
"Schools under our parental-notification law are required to inform parents . . . of
matters relating to human sexuality that may be taught in the classroom and to allow
that child to be out of the classroom for that period of the education." He did not
comment specifically on Parker's case. (Boston Globe, 4-29-05)

"We don't view telling a child that there is a family out there with two mommies as
teaching about homosexuality, heterosexuality, or any kind of sexuality," countered
Thomas B. Griffiths, Lexington School Committee chairman. "We are teaching about
the realities of where different children come from."

Superintendent William J. Hurley warned Parker in an April 27 letter to stay off his
son's school's property or he would be subject to arrest again.

"This is an unbelievable outrage," said Brian Camenker, a friend of Parker and a
Newton, MA parent. "It's where last year's same-sex 'marriage' ruling has brought
us." Camenker is a leader of Article 8 Alliance, a group seeking to remove the four
Massachusetts supreme court judges who voted to impose same-sex marriage on Bay
State citizens.

Propaganda in Santa Cruz
Numerous parents of high school students in Santa Cruz County, CA have complained
to school officials about open advocacy of homosexuality by lesbian teachers there.
Some teachers hang pro-homosexual posters in their classrooms, discuss their
lesbian lifestyle in class, and refer students to gay, lesbian and bisexual
organizations, while not allowing posters celebrating traditional families, according
to the Pacific Justice Institute website (2-2-05).

After the Texas Board of Education required the McGraw-Hill textbook publisher to
alter health books to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman,
professors at Penn State University started a petition drive to boycott the textbooks
or to register disagreement with the text changes. (See Education Reporter, Dec. 2004
for details on the Texas decision.)

Abstinence program successes
In more good news for abstinence education, a study of the Best Friends program
found that girls in the District of Columbia public schools who participated in the
abstinence program were only about one-seventh as likely to have sex compared with
their peers, half as likely to drink or smoke, and one-eighth as likely to use illegal
drugs.

Researcher Robert Lerner's peer-reviewed study, based on data from 3,000 middle
school students, was published in April in the journal Adolescent and Family Health.
(See also www.bestfriendsfoundation.org.)

The study also found extraordinary results among the high school participants in Best
Friends, called Diamond Girls. The Diamond Girls were nearly 120 times less likely to
engage in premarital sex than high school girls not in the program, the author told the
Washington Times (4-28-05). Diamond Girls were also 26 times less likely to use
drugs, nearly nine times less likely to smoke, and three times as likely to abstain
from alcohol. Some 800 girls were involved in this comparison.

The Best Friends program serves 24 cities in 15 states and recently won a three-year
federal abstinence grant. It does not teach girls about contraception. Now in its 18th
year, it uses school-based curricula, fitness classes, mentoring, role models and
community service to help girls make healthy choices during adolescence. A
companion program for boys, called Best Men, began in 2000.

Heritage studies
Abstinence programs are more effective at reducing early sexual activity than
programs that discuss the use of contraception, according to a February study by the
Heritage Foundation. The foundation also disputes a recent Yale-Columbia analysis
concluding that teenagers who pledge to abstain from sex before marriage contract
venereal diseases at rates similar to those of nonpledgers.

In June, Heritage released a study reanalyzing the same federal data examined by the
Yale-Columbia analysis and concluding that virginity pledgers were 25% less likely to
have sexually transmitted diseases as young adults than nonpledgers from similar
socioeconomic backgrounds.

In a March 5 letter to the Washington Times, Health and Human Services Assistant
Secretary Wade F. Horn wrote, "At least 10 published studies — four in scientific peer-
reviewed journals — have shown that [abstinence] education helps youth delay the
onset of sexual activity."

Montana maneuvering
Notwithstanding the demonstrated success of abstinence programs, Montana Gov.
Brian Schweitzer plans to terminate a statewide abstinence council credited with
helping lower the state's high teen pregnancy rate, and is turning down federal funds
to promote abstinence to Montana teens, the Family Research Council reports.

Another Montana elected official, U.S. Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT), is reportedly


http://www.eagleforum.org/educate/2005/july05/sex-survey.html



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