| Literature DB >> 30791604 |
Hildie Leung1, Daniel T L Shek2, Edvina Leung3, Esther Y W Shek4.
Abstract
As reported by the World Health Organization in 2017, there are 2 million+ young people living with HIV worldwide. The World Health Organization also reported that a third of all new HIV infections around the world are estimated to occur among youths (aged 15⁻25). and teen pregnancy rates are on the rise in many places. These worrying trends suggest that existing sexuality education programs and interventions may be inadequate and/or ineffective. Although the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development's (ICPD) Programme of Action highlighted the roles of Governments to offer sex education to young people to promote teenage reproductive health, yet inconsistency exists in the related initiatives in the global context. The present article aims to provide a comprehensive literature review of the existing sexuality programs in selected places in both English-speaking (i.e., the United States of America, the United Kingdom) and Chinese-speaking contexts (i.e., Hong Kong, Mainland China, and Taiwan). Based on the review, observations and implications for sexuality education policy and practice, as well as recommendations for future research for youths are outlined.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; sex and relationship education; sex education; sexual health; sexual wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30791604 PMCID: PMC6406865 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16040621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Summary of sex education aspects in the two large English-speaking societies.
| Societies Under Review | Current Policy/Guideline on Sexuality EDUCATION | Program and Its Main Objectives | Actual Practice in Schools | Teacher Training | Evaluation and Research |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Sex education under jurisdiction of individual states | Sex education is often included as part of health or physical education (PE) curriculum in public schools Providing accurate information about human sexuality (e.g., anatomy, human reproduction, gender identity, STIs, sexual abuse, HIV/AIDs, etc.) Helping youths develop healthy attitudes, values, and insights regarding human sexuality Equipping youths with communication, assertiveness, decision-making, non-coercive in relationships Encouraging adolescents to make responsible choices by practicing abstinence, postponing sex, practicing safe sex. | Sex education is commonly delivered by health and PE teachers | Forms of training: | Numerous sex education programs have been evaluated and published |
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| 2017: legislation passed to mandate relationship and sex education for all school children commencing September 2020 | Sex and Relationship Education Guidance was developed in 2000 Helping pupils develop skills to live confidently and independently helping students deal with moral and social questions highlighting the importance of marriage for family life teaching students to understand and respect oneself and others learning the reasons for delaying sexual activity and its benefits | SRE is delivered within the PSHE framework | Forms of training: | Nationwide large-scale sex education programs have been systematically evaluated using mixed methods and published |
Summary of sex education aspects in the three Chinese-speaking societies.
| Societies Under Review | Current Policy/Guideline on Sexuality Education | Program and Its Main Objectives | Actual Practice in Schools | Teacher Training | Evaluation and Research |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1997: Guideline on sexuality education | Sexuality Education is suggested to be integrated into the curriculum of Moral and Civic Education. | Sexuality education is not compulsory and standardized, schools generally adopt a diverse approach, like permeating through personal and social education programs, runs once or twice a week in the form master or mistress period plus general assembly and/or extra-curricular activities. | Forms of training: | The Government and several NGOs had conducted research in investigating the effectiveness of sexuality education irregularly. The latest official survey was conducted in 2012–2013. |
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| 2008: School-based health education policy | Six to seven hours Health Education is mandated in all primary, secondary and higher schools in each semester. | Health Education is mandated but not included in the assessment criteria, thus it is not treated seriously in some schools, and some exclude the relevant subjects in the school curriculum. | Forms of training: | Numerous studies on the mandatory sex education programs and training were done by scholars and different organizations, but the official evaluations conducted by the Government were insufficient. |
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| 1997: Education reform policy “The Nine-Year Joint Curriculum” | Gender education is mandated in the curriculum. understanding diversity in gender development understanding personal development and career planning, the possibility to overcome the limits and expectation in the society developing positive self-concept and pursuing personal interests and strengths eliminating gender discriminations and preconceptions, respecting social diversity actively seeking social support resources and establishing a gender-balanced society developing an interactive model with harmony, respect and equality between genders | Usually integrated sex education into the learning area of Health and Physical Education, Social Studies, Science and Technology, and Integrative Activities. | Forms of training: Formal courses, talks, conferences and online resources | Evaluations are organized systematically in three databases: Ministry of Science and Technology Department of Health National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations in Taiwan |