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The textbooks that Clovis Unified uses for sex education in both high school and intermediate school provide medically inaccurate information in violation of California law. In a list of ways to prevent STDs, for example, the high school textbook never
mentions condoms, instead telling students to respect themselves, get plenty of rest, go out as a group, and practice abstinence. This is not just an omission of information, but a distortion that creates an inaccurate picture of how teens can protect themselves, which puts their health at risk.
The information that the district does provide about condoms and contraception is undermined and contradicted by the districts reliance on other inaccurate and misleading material. (The core curriculum is based on the textbooks mentioned above.) The curricula also contain sexual orientation bias, which violates California law and is harmful to teens health. For example, many of the materials teach that sexual activity is only acceptable between a man and a woman who are married and that any sexual activity outside marriage is emotionally, physically and morally detrimental, even among adults. Sex education in Clovis also violates the law by promoting gender bias and stereotypes. One video, No Apologies: The Truth About Life, Love, Sex, tells students that most boys will lie about having an STD in order to get sexual favors while girls only engage in sexual activity to get love in return, cause thats what they really want. Sex Still Has a Price Tag, a video by Pam Stenzel that the district approved for use in June, provides misinformation about STDs, and tells students that condoms are not effective. Stenzel recently faced wide criticism after a speech at a West Virginia high school during which she told students If you take birth control, your mother probably hates you.
Clovis Unified is in clear violation of the law and is knowingly putting young peoples health at risk, said Melissa Goodman senior staff attorney at the ACLU of Southern California. Teens need complete and accurate sexual health information for whatever point in their lives they become sexually active and California sexual education law mandates we give them that. Under California law sexual health education in public schools must be medically accurate, include science-based information about condoms and contraception as well as abstinence, and be free of bias. The California Department of Public Health recently attributed Californias declining teen birth rate to Californias comprehensive sex education, but the Clovis Unified School District is still refusing to provide the quality sex education that has been proven effective in protecting students health. ###