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The Dallas Morning News
October 6, 2005
Article by David Tarrant
Virgin Territory
Can
abstinence –oriented education really work in a sex-drenched
society?
Lauren Lowery
holds up two aluminum foil hearts. They represent the
best-looking girl and boy in high school. Naturally, they fall
in love.
“So these two kids wonder what they could do to make
their love last forever,” she says.
She squeezes the two hearts together into a ball.
“You’ve probably never seen foil having sex before,” she
wisecracks, and her high school audience breaks into laughter.
But will having sex make this feeling last forever?
Even if the young lovers don’t get a sexually
transmitted disease or an unwanted pregnancy, they will probably
be left with emotional scars.
She unfolds one of the crumpled hearts and compares
it with a shiny new one.
“What kind of heart do you want to give?”
Ms. Lowery, a speaker for Aim For Success, is
one soldier in an abstinence army battling for the hearts and
minds of today’s youth. Today she is speaking to sophomores at
Wylie High School, northeast of Dallas in Collin county.
The national program based in Plano is one of
many targeting teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted
diseases. With strong support from President Bush and millions
of dollars in funding, abstinence-only sex ed has become the
government’s preferred strategy in the war on teenage pregnancy
and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
Texas is on the front lines of that war.
The state’s teen birth rate, though on the
decline, was the second-highest in the nation – 64 births per
1000 teens (ages 15 to 19) in 2002, according to the Kids Count
Data Book, released in July by the Baltimore-based Anne E. Casey
Foundation.
Meanwhile, STDs are rising among teenagers, The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 19
million STD infections occur annually, with almost half of them
among youths ages 15 to 24. Compared with older adults,
adolescents are at higher risk for acquiring STDs for
physiological reasons and because they make less use of
prevention services, according to CDC analysts.
Enter Aim For Success and similar programs
geared toward stemming the tide of teenage sex.
The country’s largest program of its kind, Aim
For Success makes 2,500 presentations a year for grades six
through 12, says Marilyn Morris, who founded the group in 1993.
The message is that young people’s goals and
dreams can be derailed by premarital sex, says Ms. Morris, who
speaks from personal experience. As a high school senior in
Lubbock, she abandoned her dream of tennis stardom after
becoming pregnant.
“Abstinence is a very positive, upbeat message,”
she says, “It’s not a fear message, it’s a free message.”
Abstinence
only?
Nationally, teenage births have dropped by
nearly one-third since 1990, and supporters of abstinence-only
education claim responsibility for the drop.
“The only change is that abstinence-only
education has been introduced,” says Ms. Morris. “Why would we
want to change something that’s obviously working?”
But that ignores other factors, according to
supporters of more comprehensive sex education. Use of birth
control and protection against disease by high-schoolers has
increased during the last decade, according to the National
Center for Health Statistics.
In 2003, 63 percent of 15 to 19 year olds
reported using a condom the last time they had sexual
intercourse, compared with 53 percent 10 years earlier. And
nearly all (98 percent) teens 15 to 19 years old who have had
sex report using at least one method of birth control.
Abstinence-only advocates say that not having
sex is the only 100 percent effective way to avoid an STD. “We
tell kids that even if you use condoms, you could still become
pregnant or get a sexually transmitted disease,”Ms. Morris says.
The State Board of Education agrees. It favors
the abstinence-only approach, and the board adopted new health
textbooks this year that promote traditional marriage and sexual
abstinence while providing limited information about condoms,
contraception and other sensitive sex-related topics.
Risky
Behavior
“Have you seen that commercial for that shampoo…
what’s it called?” Ms. Lowry asks her teen assembly, who
immediately shout: “Herbal Essence!”
The ad, which shows a woman moaning with ecstasy
as she lathers her hair, is another example of sex permeating
advertising and pop culture.
To says teens are overstimulated these days is a
little like saying Texas is hot in August. They swim in an ocean
of electronic media such as TV and videos, music, video games
and computers. And the message is hard to miss: Sex surrounds
them. It’s easy, fun and everybody seems to be doing it.
Now some hard data is replacing speculation
about trends in teen sex.
A new federal study shows that many teenagers
are substituting oral sex for sexual intercourse. The Sept. 15
report, the most comprehensive national survey of sexual
behaviors ever undertaken by the federal government, included
these finding:
Slightly more than half of American teenagers
ages 15 to 19 have engaged in oral sex, with females and males
reporting similar levels of experience.
Almost one in four teens who had not had sexual
intercourse reported they had taken part in oral sex: 24 percent
of males and 22 percent of females. The rate was higher for
older virgins (18 and 19 year olds): 31 percent of males and 35
percent of females.
The figures come from the 2002 National Survey
of Family Growth, a survey of 12,571 men and women ages 15 to
44, under a contract with the University of Michigan’s Institute
for Social Research. To ensure privacy, participants answered
questions on a laptop computer, without revealing the answers to
the interviewers.
The data show the need for “honest, accurate sex
education,” says James Wagoner, president of Advocated for
Youth, a national organization against abstinence-only education
policies.
“The emphasis on abstinence only education
precludes discussion about safer sex practices, putting young
people at risk,” he says, “especially those who are technical
virgins and who, while trying to keep their virginity intact,
engage in other risky sexual behavior.”
The data show that teens may not realize that
oral sex carries health risks, says Dr. Jennifer Manlove, who
directs studies on fertility and family structure at Child
Trends, a research center.
“What’s disturbing about these findings is that
many teens seem unaware of the health risks associated with oral
sex, such as the possibility of contracting sexually transmitted
infections, including HIV,” Dr. Manlove says. “Parents, health
educators and designers of pregnancy-prevention programs need to
address these risks.”
Taking the
pledge
In a segment called “Mastering the Media,” Ms. Lowry presents
the PowerPoint equivalent of those nasty driver’s education
films about car wrecks. “Ted’s Story,” which is about a man who
becomes addicted to porn from an early age, turns out to the
tale of serial killer Ted Bundy.
“I’m not here to say that if you happen to see
porn you’ll go out an rape,” she says. “But porn will not leave
you satisfied. Successful people learn to avoid it.”
Her abstinence message extends to more than sex.
“Jill,” a high school transfer, went to a party to make friends.
After only one beer, she started flirting with a guy. They drove
off together and he sexually assaulted her. “I would encourage
you to avoid drugs and drinking altogether,” Ms. Lowry says.
Some groups recognize that teens need more than
just a recitation of dire statistics and verbal admonishments to
just say no.
One national organization, called Silver Ring
Thing, is gaining popularity because it offers teens support and
encouragement for abstinence. It uses personal emails and
rock-concert-type shows where teens take public virginity
pledges.
Based in Pittsburgh, Pa., Silver Ring Thing got
its name from encouraging teens to wear a silver ring as an
outward display of their commitment to abstinence, says Denny
Pattyn, a Christian youth minister who founded the organization
in 1996 and now receives about $1 million annually in federal
funding.
Those who take the Silver Ring Thing pledge
receive e-mails offering advice, tips and support twice a week
for four months. Teens can also join a leadership program,
organize Silver Ring Thing chapters and join the crew working on
shows.
“It’s legitimately cool,” says Mr. Pattyn.
He believes he is helping to build a movement
among teens. “If we can reach 20 percent of America’s youth, we
can create a culture shift.”
Joining
the club
Locally, students at Vines High School, which
serves ninth-and 10th-graders in Plano, started the
Vines Abstinence Club to support one another and promote
abstinence. The club’s two dozen members get together once a
week before school. They talk about issues in their lives and
how to deal with peer pressure and other problems, says Vines
sophomore Jackie Guerra, 15.
Club members say they know sexually active
peers. “Many of the girls I know either end up heart-broken and
depressed or pregnant,” Ms. Guerra says.
Chase Jones, 15, says he joined the club because
a lifestyle of abstinence helps keep him focused on his
long-term goal of going to college as a student athlete. A
sexual relationship could cause emotional problems or a
pregnancy and “mess up your goals,” he says.
An abstinent lifestyle doesn’t have to inhibit
your social life, says 15-year-old Emily Letzelter. “You can
have fun in ways that won’t threaten your future. We’re all
friends. We hang out.”
She says a sexual relationship should never be
casual.
“I don’t want to take the biggest risk of my
life with someone who’s not worth it. I don’t want to get
pregnant with the wrong man. It’s worth it to wait for me.”
Ms. Lowery offers herself as proof that sex can
wait. “I’m 28 and I just got married,” she tells her audience of
Wylie High School sophomores. “I gave the gift of virginity to
my husband and he gave it to me.”
Both she and her husband made this decision as
teenagers, she says, adding: “It’s worth the wait.”
Reprinted with permission from the Dallas Morning News.
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