| Join NCAC Now | |
EXPRESS YOURSELF! |
in support of free expression The information presented here by the National
Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) may be freely redistributed in its entirety,
provided that readers are informed that the information was obtained from
NCAC's World Wide Web site and that credit is given to the appropriate source
of whatever information is used. Permission is expressly granted for the information
obtained to be made available for file transfer from installations offering
unrestricted anonymous file transfer on the Internet. Information found here
may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial documents without
the written permission from the National Coalition Against Censorship. LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
|
NCAC Censorship News Issue #78: Review: Teaching Sex, by Jeffrey Moran Teaching Sex, by Jeffrey Moran, recently published, provides a timely historical overview on the politics of sexuality education. Tracing the beginnings of the fear-based approach to sex-ed in the "social hygiene" movement of the early 20th century, Moran takes the story through the innovative work of SIECUS in the 1960s, the Christian right's attacks on sex-ed as "semi-legal pornography" and a "communist plot," and its success in the 1980s in introducing distorted curricula like Sex Respect. Moran nicely demonstrates how the right has used teenage sexuality as a wedge issue in advancing its political agenda. His major omissions are the 1996 "abstinence-until-marriage" law, and any comparative discussion of European sexuality education. Moran takes a dim view of the ability of sex-ed to affect adolescents' behavior; but he might have thought differently had he investigated the European approach. The book is nevertheless a valuable resource full of fascinating information.
|