ABSTRACT
The purpose of
this study is to examine the long term effects of formal sex education inmiddle
school and high school on college aged women in regards to how they view their own bodies. The hypothesis was that the women who received the certain factors of formal sex education were more likely
to have a higher self image, more self-esteem andwould view their bodies more positively. These
factors are comprehensive formal
sexeducation that covered feelings, emotions, and body image, specially trained teachers thatwere accepting of everyone, and the opportunity for students to ask their own questionsand have them answered. Eighteen college aged women were interviewed for thirty tofifty five minutes about their formal sex education in middle school and high school.Questions also covered how they feel currently about their body, what effects they feeltheir formal sex education had on them, and how they feel sex education should betaught. The findings were that while most women who were interviewed had a relatively positive body image of themselves and felt personally unaffected by their formal sexeducation, they felt that formal sex education could and does in fact affect how womenviewed their bodies. Positive factors included a combination of single sex and co-educational classrooms; accepting teachers who answered questions from students;subjects that were discussed including body image, eating disorders, feelings andemotions involved with puberty and sex, the female body, and sexual assault; and howmuch formal sex education they received. Negative factors included closed minded anduntrained teachers; short periods of formal sex education; lack of discussion of theaforementioned subject; not being allowed/not feeling comfortable enough to ask questions and co-educational classrooms in which female students felt uncomfortabletalking in front of the male students. Other factors that affect how women view their bodies included family; activities; the media and peers.1
sexeducation that covered feelings, emotions, and body image, specially trained teachers thatwere accepting of everyone, and the opportunity for students to ask their own questionsand have them answered. Eighteen college aged women were interviewed for thirty tofifty five minutes about their formal sex education in middle school and high school.Questions also covered how they feel currently about their body, what effects they feeltheir formal sex education had on them, and how they feel sex education should betaught. The findings were that while most women who were interviewed had a relatively positive body image of themselves and felt personally unaffected by their formal sexeducation, they felt that formal sex education could and does in fact affect how womenviewed their bodies. Positive factors included a combination of single sex and co-educational classrooms; accepting teachers who answered questions from students;subjects that were discussed including body image, eating disorders, feelings andemotions involved with puberty and sex, the female body, and sexual assault; and howmuch formal sex education they received. Negative factors included closed minded anduntrained teachers; short periods of formal sex education; lack of discussion of theaforementioned subject; not being allowed/not feeling comfortable enough to ask questions and co-educational classrooms in which female students felt uncomfortabletalking in front of the male students. Other factors that affect how women view their bodies included family; activities; the media and peers.1
INTRODUCTION
Sex education
is an issue under raging debate in our country. The
biggest issueregarding sexual education in the United States
is that of what should be taught and howit
affects the actions of the students. Some sides,
including groups such as the HeritageFoundation (2005) and Focus on the Family (2005), are
arguing for abstinence onlyeducation in hopes of reducing teenage
pregnancy rates and lowering the rate of sexuallyactive teenagers who are contracting sexually transmitted
infections. On the other end of the spectrum
are those who want comprehensive sex education to be taught, for many of the same reasons. The difference is that abstinence only education offers abstaining fromsexual activity until marriage as the
only option, where as comprehensive sex educationteaches students about the different types and effectiveness of
contraceptives and birthcontrol.Both
types of formal sex education teach information about other subjects as well,including,
but not limited to, reproduction, pregnancy, the female body, the male
body, puberty and bodily changes, sexually transmitted diseases and
infections, homosexualactivity, heterosexual
activity, sexual assault. No two programs are the same,
and inmany states,
the decision of which subjects are taught is left up to the discretion of theteacher and/or the parents of the students.Some schools offer no formal sex
education. Others offer it as an elective or aclass students may opt out of, while still others
require it as part of the curriculum.Whether
or not formal sex education is taught depends a lot on state and country laws
andregulations. Students in some areas
may receive as little as one day of formal sex2
education between their time in middle school
and high school, even as other studentsreceive formal sex education every year
sixth grade through twelfth grade.The format and
capacity of formal sex education
also vary. Lectures,question/answer format and group
conversations/dialogue tend to be the most often usedformat for teaching sex
education. However, other teachers may have other methods,including movies, skits, speakers, etc. Some schools have sex education as its own class;others mix it in with some other
specialty subjects, like a freshman orientation class, or inconjunction with another smaller subject like driver’s education. The most common and popular approach is to have the sex education as a unit in a
traditional required class,usually biology or
another science, health or gym class. Teachers of formal
sexeducation range from the school nurse, to a gym
or biology teacher to a speaker from anorganization like Planned Parenthood to
specially trained teachers hired by the school.With
all of these different approaches to offering formal sex education, it is clear that there is no regulated
information that all students are getting. Some students may begetting misinformation or a much
smaller amount of education than their peers indifferent schools. Some groups such as the Heritage
Foundation (2005) and Focus on theFamily (2005) may advocate that many of these
subjects taught in formal sex educationare
unnecessary or subjects that should be taught to students
by their parents. However,this is most often not the case.
In a perfect world, all children would have wonderfulrelations with their parents, and all
parents would be open and informed about puberty, bodily changes,
reproduction, male and female bodies, body image, eating disorders,sexual assault, gender and sexual identity, and other
issues that are crucial to the physicaland
mental health of adolescents in our society. Sadly, not
all children learn this
Many of the
points she makes about advertising can be also made about how formal sexeducation is taught. She discusses how the way things are phrased can affect women, aswell as
the pictures they
are shown. One could look at formal sex education and wonder if the
pictures that are used in the textbooks might influence the women in the class.Kilbourne
has a text dedicated to the theme “the more you subtract, the more you
add(1999)” which talks about images of women who are thinner, and who are in
closed off positions. These images make women feel they need to be
quieter in order to be anaccepted member of
society. The same idea could apply to sex education; females mightfeel that if they are not encouraged to
ask questions, the message they receive that to beaccepted, they should not
talk about their bodies and sex.A woman’s body
image is not the result of just one influence; the media, a child’s peers,
parents, and many more items factor into play. However, it is possible that
theway sex education is taught could affect how a woman views her body, both at
the timeof the formal sex education, and later on in life. If this is a
feasible possibility,
it is worthlooking
into formal sex education for the future generations, and how they are taughtabout their bodies and sexual activity. The studies mentioned earlier have
covered somany aspects as to what affects self image and how
women view their bodies, but haveleft out
how sex education affects women’s views of their own bodies. Therefore, I feelthat
this study of the long term effect of formal sex education on how women view
their bodies will help to bridge the gap in the literature,
and help to discover more aboutanother
influence on women’s self image and identity.
The Theories
Behind this Study
15
Sex has been around since literally the beginning of life. Philosophers andtheologists
have been theorizing about sex and sexuality for just as long. The most wellknow of
these is Freud, whose theories of castration anxiety and penis envy influencedthe work of many subsequent scholars. Foucault is also a well known
theorist onsexuality. In his book The History of Sexuality (1978), he explains why
humans are sointerested in learning about sex and the functions
and processes associated with sex.Between each of us and our sex, the
West has placed a never ending demand for the
truth: it is up to us to extract the truth of sex, since this truth is beyond
itsgrasp; it is up to sex to tell us its truth, since sex is what holds it in darkness. Butis sex hidden from us, concealed by a
new sense of decency, kept under a bushel by the grim necessities of
bourgeois society? On the contrary – it shines forth, itis incandescent. Several centuries ago it was placed at the center of a formidable
petition
to know
. A double petition, in that we are compelled to know how thingsare with
it, while it is being suspected of knowing how things are with us(Foucault
1978: 77-78).In this, he states that within
each of us is an urge to learn all we can about sex and theforces that drive it, and how it connected to us. Foucault goes
on to state that even in amore conservative
society, the yearning to strive for the answers is there none the less.That
explains why we as a society feel the need to, and consequently need to learnabout sex, and how sex works. But why should this study focus on women?
In her essayentitled Thinking like a Woman (1990) Okin references
many difference sociologists andtheir
different ideas as to
how men and women differ in their thinking. One theorist,O’Brien,
“finds the roots of men’s and women’s modes of thinking in their biology, butwhat she considers determinative is women’s power to
reproduce, and men’s alienationfrom
reproduction (1990: 154).”
She is saying that one main difference in the thinking patterns of men and women is
caused by the function of reproduction in women.Later
on in her essay, Okin talks about theories belonging to Miller, saying:16
As subordinates in a male-dominated society, they
[women] are required todevelop
psychological characteristics that please the dominant group and fulfill itsneeds. Such qualities as submissiveness, dependency, the desire to please andconform,
lack of initiative, inability to act assertively or think independently, andthe
like have been regarded as signs of good adjustment and mental health inwomen, and as the opposite in men. Sociological studies of sex-role
stereotypingconfirm these assertions. The catch in all this stereotyping and in the
socialization patterns
that go along with it is that what has been regarded as a healthy,
well-adjusted
adult
turns out to be a healthy, well-adjusted
man
. The qualities fosteredin women are seen as functional only for subordinate
status (1990: 154).Given what she is saying, one makes the assumption
that women are taught in our society to be
submissive,
dependent, and see themselves as subordinate citizens. Is it possible that formal sex education
is also giving a negative idea to women? Perhapsformal sex education is
teaching women to think submissively, and this could be having anegative impact on their bodies.As mentioned by O’Brien, biological differences, and
the function of reproductionhave an
effect on how women think. Maybe the way formal sex education presents the biology of male and female bodies
and reproduction can affect how women think aboutand view their bodies, not
only at the time of the formal sex education, but also later on.Therefore, this study discusses formal sex education.
It talks about the experiences of eighteen women that have received
formal sex education in middle school, high school or both. It
attempts to figure out if this theory might hold true – and sees if how women aretaught
about these very biological differences and reproduction does in fact affect howthey
view their bodies
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