The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
- Share via
Two recent Orange County studies have put Newport-Mesa school
officials on alert. What they do with the results of these studies may
well open a can of educational worms.
First came a quite remarkable survey conducted by a group of 15 Santa
Ana teens who got tired of seeing their friends get pregnant and drop out
of school. Funded by a grant from the California Wellness Foundation and
the support of Campfire USA, these determined young people volunteered
their time for 18 months to survey fellow students about their sex
habits, as well as parents and teachers on what they would like to see
taught about sex in public schools.
The results said loud and clear that abstinence-focused sex education
isn’t working. As one of the teen surveyors put it to a Los Angeles Times
reporter: “We want our schools to teach contraception and how to deal
with relationships. Students know they should be getting birth control,
but they don’t know how to get it or how to use it.”
Several months later, another survey, even closer to home, by the
California Department of Health Services found that the southern region
of Costa Mesa had 91 pregnancies per 1,000 teenage girls, almost twice
the average for both Orange County and the state of California. A
parallel study by Planned Parenthood found that Latina youths in Orange
County are sexually active earlier and more frequently (44% of Latino
males by age 14 and 35% of Latinas by age 15) than average U.S. teens.
These studies took place in the aftermath of U.S. Surgeon Gen. David
Satcher’s report on the nation’s sexual health in which he strongly urged
sex education that would inform public school students about birth
control, a position echoed by Secretary of State Colin Powell and --
according to a Kaiser Family Foundation Study -- about two-thirds of
parents surveyed.
There are other numbers, pointing to the same conclusions, but that’s
enough to wonder what use the people who run the Newport-Mesa schools
plan to make of this information. I asked that question of Supt. Robert
Barbot and the school board’s president, Judy Franco. And I got educated
first.
Sex education in Newport-Mesa schools, I was told, is uniform
throughout the district. It is taught as a regular segment of the
10th-grade health program. When a student signs up for this class, a
letter goes home describing the content and materials to be used. At the
bottom is a form parents must sign requesting the class for their child.
This letter must be on file before the child is enrolled. Barbot told me
that 90% to 95% of parents who receive this letter make such a request.
The sex education parameters in California public schools are spelled
out in legislation passed more than a decade ago that sets up 11
conditions for the curriculum. Two of these conditions are especially
controversial. The curriculum must “stress” -- but is not limited to --
abstinence. And it must “teach honor and respect for monogamous
heterosexual marriage” -- a gratuitous shot at gay students.
So within such restrictions, what steps are being contemplated in the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District for dealing with the problems raised
by the studies described above?
Barbot said: “We think it’s important what the studies don’t say. We
believe that the number of pregnancies is understated, and that it is
certainly not totally a Latina problem. Our curriculum isn’t 100%
abstinence, and we believe there’s a pattern here that we need to
understand so we can offer better quality programs to get to the problem
issues. We also need to cooperate with other public and private agencies.
The bottom line is that we have a lot of ladies who need our help.”
Franco pretty much echoed these views while stressing that
Newport-Mesa enrolls sex education students only at the request of their
parents. She added that “we haven’t yet looked at these studies as a
board, but when we do there is sure to be controversy because this issue
brings out the people who strongly believe in abstinence-only education
-- for everyone.”
Franco touches on two critical issues. First, no local child is
required to take a sex education class. And, second, those of us who
object to teaching abstinence exclusively aren’t putting down the virtues
of premarital abstinence but rather pointing out that in a nation where
teenage birth rates are higher than any other industrialized society and
four out of five teens have had sexual intercourse by age 19, abstinence
is light years away from reality. It is a surrealistic goal, not a
remedy. These kids need factual information. Anything less is a
disservice to them.
The abstinence troops are a classic example of a small minority that
has managed to impose its moralistic absolutes on an indifferent society.
They’ll be out in force if our school officials choose to tackle this
issue. Maybe it’s time for the other side to show up.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.