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Anne G. Sabo, Ph.D., also known as Quizzical mama, is a former academic turned public educator, author, speaker, freelance writer, and mama- and sex...
 
 
 
 

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Children's Sex Education Book Too Graphic?!

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A Washington state mother has filed a complaint against her local school district for exposing her 10 year-old daughter to a children's sex education book, which she believes is "completely too graphic." What's the Big Secret: Talking about Sex With Girls and Boys (2000; first ed. 1997) by Laurie Krasny Brown, Ed.D., and Marc Brown is actually recommended for children ages 3-8 by Debra W. Haffner in From Diapers to Dating: A Parent's Guide to Raising Sexually Healthy Children (2008; first ed. 1999, 2000, 2004). Haffner served for twelve years as president of SIECUS -- the country's largest clearinghouse of sexuality education -- and has been a human sexuality educator for more than twenty-five years. Incidentally, I read the book in contention to my toddler daughter on a regular basis.

The BookWhat strikes me in the media's coverage of this story are the select quotations and presentation of the book:

"[The book] includes cartoons explaining masturbation" and "cartoon characters discussing the feeling you can get from ‘rubbing your genitals’ and shows a young boy telling a girl, ‘I’ll show you mine.’"(Mail Online)

"[The book] shows how boys and girls are physically different, offers a lesson in reproduction and "talks about 'different types of touching.'" (Q13 FOX News)

Taken out of context, you might begin to think that the book is indeed very graphic. But it's not. The illustrations that accompany the page about touching yourself feature a boy snuggled up on a couch beneath a blanket (with both hands on top of the blanket), a girl washing her hands, a bald man combing his long beard, a cat licking its paw, and a "do not disturb" sign held up by a person behind a changing curtain. The text reads:

Enjoying your body and the way it feels is an important part of being alive, no matter how old you are. Some parts of your body are more sensitive than others; do you feel more when you touch your elbow or your lips?

Touching and rubbing your genitals to feel good is called masturbation. Some of us try this; some of us don't. However, it's best to do this private kind of touching off by yourself. (16)

The book's further discussion of different kinds of touching is crucial:

Everyone needs good touches to feel loved an happy. If you want a hug, you can say so. But no one has the right to touch you in a way that feels wrong or uncomfortable.

Whoever you touch has feelings too. If someone doesn't want to be touched, then respect his or her wishes – don't do it! (17)

BookFor other types of touches, the book refers to hugging your parents, wrestling with a friend, shaking your teacher's hand, and a baby being held and cuddled.

The boy telling a girl, "I'll show you mine," is acting the patient in a game of Playing Doctor, which as Haffner points out is a common sex play between children, indicating "expected and natural childhood sexual curiosity" and not a desire for "erotic fulfillment" (56-57).

In fact, some sexologists even believe that early childhood sex play teaches children some important skills. They point to studies of monkeys: In monkeys, early (pre-adult) sex play lays the foundation for successful male-female reproduction in adulthood. Monkeys who are raised in isolation, and do not have this opportunity, never copulate or reproduce, even when paired with an experienced mate. (57)

BookMoreover, I appreciate the book's focus on how boys and girls are mostly alike but have some distinguishing features: primarily the genitals. The book introduces the terms penis, scrotum, and testicles for boys, and vulva, clitoris, and vagina for girls.

The book also gives a simple lesson on reproduction – hence also the description of why boys and girls are physically different: "the sexual parts of girls and boys are made differently so that when they grow up they are able to create babies

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EmSun 6 pts

I am always astonished by how some people want to shield their children from completely natural bodily functions. From the excerpts I've seen, this book appears completely appropriate to broach the subject in a tasteful way.

I'd rather that my children learn the truth from a book or myself instead of the weird mix-ups of their peers.

Lorita Aiken 5 pts

You stole the words right out of my mouth. I think the mom who is raising issue about this book is really doing a disservice to her child. Like ignorance to the subject of sex really stopped anyone from wanting to explore what is so natural. I definitely plan on talking to my kids, in terms they can understand of course, about sex and being aware of their bodies at a very early age.

I'm actually glad I know about this book because now I'm going to use it to teach my kids. I absolutely want to use the real scientific terms for their body parts; no use in sugar coating anything by giving them cute names.

It's funny you mentioned lgbt courses being offered in school. I took a course in college and was truly amazed at what I learned. Unfortunately, I was one of those shielded children (to a certain extent) and I think it would be a good idea to introduce kids in high school, maybe even middle school, about the lgbt community. A lot of kids are identifying themselves as lgbt ealier in life. Why not empower them with more knowledge and awareness so they don't feel so alone?

Lorita blogs at Pickled Ketchup ( http://www.pickledketchup.com ).

Just_Margaret 5 pts

Oh, Jenna! I *want* to...my only concern is her happening upon it if she were to go to my blog. (Which she doesn't really do, but...)

~Margaret

Margaret Barney writes at Just Margaret ( http://maurhoffbarney.blogspot.com ) and is a contributor at Prime Parents Club ( http://www.primeparentsclub.com/ ).

nellewrites 6 pts

thing always works well with people and life, doesn't it?

There will be parents who object, and I guess it is their right to withdraw the material from use by their child. What troubles me with this is the fracturing that takes place as person A objects to one topic, person B to another. And we wonder why educators do not accomplish more with children. Nothing like tying the hands of educators before they even say a word to students.

Objecting and removing does not change the fact that children are born with genitalia and will discover the uses and pleasures of that genitalia as they go about life. It seems to me the more information we give them that they can grasp and understand, the better they and we are. If a child doesn't grasp it now, well... they will eventually, no harm in trying.

If it isn't sex as something to huff about, it is educating our young on gay folk. Santorum is the latest to rant on California's potential law on including lgbt history in its school teachings.

Educated children are less apt to incur undesirable consequences. Educated children are more apt to get along. What is so damn dastardly about those potential outcomes?

nellewrites ( http://nellewrites.wordpress.com/ )

JennaHatfield 10 pts

Please! Blog about it!

Family Section Editor Jenna Hatfield (@FireMom ( http://twitter.com/FireMom )) blogs at Stop, Drop and Blog ( http://stopdropandblog.com ) and The Chronicles of Munchkin Land ( http://thechroniclesofmunchkinland.com ). She is a freelance writer and photographer.

Just_Margaret 5 pts

Agreed--I think it's a librarian's job to keep material available for all their patrons. What I think is tame, though, is clearly another parent's nightmare. It's like TV. Don't like it? Change the channel--but don't tell other parents what their kids should and shouldn't watch. My kids aren't allowed to watch the "tween" shows like iCarly, and other Disney sit-coms. But I wouldn't tell another mom in my neighborhood that their kids can't watch them either.

~Margaret

Margaret Barney writes at Just Margaret ( http://maurhoffbarney.blogspot.com ) and is a contributor at Prime Parents Club ( http://www.primeparentsclub.com/ ).

Just_Margaret 5 pts

I don't tell other parents how to raise their kids, so it would follow that I wouldn't tell other parents what their children should and shouldn't be reading/learning about sex. To the mother in Washington, I would say this--Object to a book all you want, it's well within your purview as a parent to prevent your child from seeing it, but don't you dare attempt to dictate what is appropriate for my children.

Frankly, the book in question doesn't provide enough information for my 9 year old. We're very open and communicative in our family. And, dare I say it? The conversations I've had with her about sex have not been as difficult as I anticipated them to be (which I really ought to blog about, come to think of it...) Even our recent conversation about porn, that came on the heels of her finding a website with less than savory videos. Ahem.

~Margaret

Margaret Barney writes at Just Margaret ( http://maurhoffbarney.blogspot.com ) and is a contributor at Prime Parents Club ( http://www.primeparentsclub.com/ ).

jennyalice 5 pts

I had "Where Do I Come From?"
then a set of late 1950s books, then "Our Bodies Ourselves."

I think it's so important for my daughter to understand her body and appreciate all of the amazing things it can do, so she can truly establish sovereignty.

Jennifer Byde Myers
www.jennyalice.com
www.ThinkingAutismGuide.com
www.HaveAutismWillTravel.com

Sally Jameson 5 pts

Not sure how the book is only now available to children of all ages without parents permission - i would have thought that any copies that got into a childs hands would be sneakily passed around the playground anyway.

LizaWasHere 5 pts

Instead of voicing an uninformed opinion about whether or not the book is too graphic, let me ask a different question.

Who should decide what books are available to children in schools?

Teachers? School librarians? Trained, educated experts on children's educational and informational needs? Or an individual parent whose moral values you may or may not share?

If that parent does not want her child to read a particular book, that's her choice. But I don't want her making the decision for my children.

Liza Barry-Kessler
Personal: LizaWasHere ( http://www.lizawashere.com/ )
Professional: Privacy Counsel LLC ( http://www.privacycounsel.net/ )

suzic63 5 pts

Does not sound innapropriate to me!!