While the majority of states require public school students to take at least one sexual education course, a patchwork of state-level provisions that mandate inaccurate, outdated, or politically motivated curricula may inhibit students from receiving essential information for their sexual health and well-being.
Only 37% of US states require sexual education in schools to be medically accurate
Reader’s Picks
-
Imagine serving your country overseas, returning home and feeling unwelcome in the very place meant to support you.This article is [...]
-
Ever felt like doing a bare minimum at work? Not investing any extra effort, not going any extra mile? You [...]
-
A simple model developed by a RIKEN researcher and a collaborator predicts the emergence of self-organized institutions that manage limited [...]