Apr 30, 2012

Why I Teach Sex Ed: Hope, among other things... Jeffrey W. Anthony

As I manage this blog, and twitter, and help with Facebook... I find that people are amazing, brilliant, and beautiful. I have read some rather inspiring "Why I Teach Sex Ed" blogs, hoping that my future is as fulfilling as those individuals' lives are.

But why do I teach? Well, there are a couple of reasons.

I love knowing more than everyone else. I remember in high school, I got made fun of because I knew the anatomy of the male genitalia better than all the other "boys" in the class. I knew the female well too, to the point where on a few occasions I corrected my health ed teacher.

I like the thrill of it: people don't like talking about things they consider socially taboo, which just makes me writhe with anticipation of their squirming when I say "masturbation".

More seriously, and why I prefer to appear less serious, in high school, I was sexually assaulted. I conquer things by knowing more, so I had to learn everything I could about sexual health, sexuality, mental health, what have you. I felt so alone. But I felt like everyone knew. I hadn't told anyone I was gay. I was afraid that someone would say "Well, you're gay, so you should have liked it" and not have understood how emasculated I felt, how ripped of power, utterly destroyed I was.

I suppressed it for years. It was not until college when I was taking a class on being a peer sexual health educator at Rutgers, when we were having a class on domestic violence and sexual assault, and one student just wasn't getting it, and kept saying "she's dumb because she was raped. it was her fault" that something clicked, and years of careful repression and wall-building crumbled within seconds and I flew apart at the seams. The sad realization that information was no longer enough.

In working at Rutgers as a peer educator, having other students look to me for information, advice, and sometimes comfort, was, in some ways, terrifying, and in others, inspiring and healing. Being able to provide some degree of solace to those in need was and is extremely cathartic. While I do find it almost cliche to say "it gets better", I do try with earnest to convey that message to students.

My hope is that not only do I just give out information and condoms, but I help individuals learn to think in a more pro-active, self-respecting way that enables them to healthier lives and relationships.

I hope I can be there for those who need someone, anyone, in their moment of need.

I hope that, through creating an environment where we can have open, honest conversations about sexuality, we learn to take that to a level where we can open dialogue about any and everything, with everyone.

Apr 24, 2012

Profiling Great Sexuality Educators: Chris White, PhD.


Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission.
1. What do you do in the field of sexuality?
I do many things, but first and foremost, I’m a sexuality educator and have been for the past eighteen years.  I am currently unemployed, working as a consultant, and seeking full-time employment opportunities in sexual and reproductive health and rights.  I was most recently the Director of Education and Training at the National Sexuality Resource Center at San Francisco State University where I was the Director of an annual Summer Institute on sexuality.
2. Where are you based out of?
I live in the fabulous and beautiful city of San Francisco!  I moved here from Austin, TX, in 2007 and immediately fell in love with the city.  I’ve also been having a longtime love affair with New York City having lived there from 1994 – 2000 and getting back there as much as possible.
3. What is your focus?  What do you do?
When I’m not helping out my husband at his vintage furniture and clothing store in the Mission District of SF, I spend most of my time working towards developing (and encouraging others to develop) new models for sexuality education for young people and adults that utilize a health promotion model and incorporate well-being, desire, and pleasure.  I also love teaching and mentoring students who want to work in the field as sexuality educators, researchers, and/or advocates.  I find that the people who choose to come into this field are some of the most dedicated, passionate, creative, and intelligent people I have ever met – oh, and they’re also incredibly fun!
4. What are your particular goals and passions in the field?
There are a number of things I would like to see happen in the field of sexuality and reproductive health and rights.  The main one, and what I have the most passion about, is seeing good sexuality education programs that make people feel good about who they are and help them develop the agency they need to fulfill their desires.  I would also like to see more connections between different movements such as the LGBT rights movement and the Reproductive rights movement.  Another thing I’d like to see developed is a greater abundance of training opportunities for students interested in entering the field.
5. Why did you choose to work in this field? 
When I was studying zoology at the University of Texas at Austin as an undergraduate, I came across a flyer for sexual health peer instructors at the student health center.  I interviewed and was accepted into the program, and after some classes, training, and practice facilitating workshops, I was ready to stand in front of my first group of freshmen in one of the dorms and talk to them about healthy and fun sex.  I immediately knew this was what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.  I also think that having teen parents and growing up gay in West Texas probably had a bit to do with my choice of a career path – I know how tough it can be for young people out there from first hand experience (as we all do!) and wanted to change that for future generations.
6. Where did you go for school/training?
I was a sexual health peer instructor at UT Austin and got some basic training from that experience.  Later, I went to New York University where I earned a Master of Arts in health studies with a specialization in sexuality education.  I had a number of jobs working on HIV research/prevention projects, in clinics and schools, and at nonprofits before I decided to go back to school to earn my PhD in Health Promotion from the University of Texas at Austin.  I took as many courses on sexuality as I could including attending a summer institute at the University of Amsterdam, was trained in qualitative research methods, and focused my dissertation research on understanding how young people learn about sex and sexuality during childhood and adolescence.
7. Do you have any literature out (websites, articles)?
You can read some of my academic articles, blogs, see my resume, and learn more about me and my work by visiting my website: christopherwhitephd.wordpress.org.  Nice bow tie, huh?
8. What would you recommend to future sexologists attempting to get into the field?
Get involved in sexuality and reproductive health and rights at your school or in your community – volunteering for Planned Parenthood or a center such as The Center for Sexual Health and Pleasure are good ways to start.  Find undergraduate or graduate programs that have an emphasis on sexuality or sexual health. Talk to professionals working in the field.  Attend conferences such as Sex::Tech, American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors, and Therapists (AASECT) annual meeting, or the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality (SSSS) meetings.  Take chance.  Email or call someone whose work you admire or go up and talk to them at a conference.
9. What is the most challenging aspect for you working in this career?
Our work is more than a paradigm shift in how we do sexuality education or research. We are facing a major cultural shift in how we view and accept our sexuality and the sexuality of others.  There are huge structural and institutionalized factors put into place by the powers that be to ensure that we feel shame and guilt and to police our sexual behaviors and desires.  We are slowly winning small battles here and there but this is a decades long war and the end is not in sight.  Working in this field can be exhausting and the losses can be painful and make us want to give up.  However, the successes are some of the most incredible and beautiful experiences I have had in my life so far, and the people I have met along the way have become some of my closest friends.
10. One must read-what would you recommend?  Why?
That’s a hard one because there’s so much good stuff out there. If there is only one, I’d say Harmful to Minors: the Perils of Protecting Children from Sex by Judith Levine – it’s probably one of the most influential books that I have read and does an excellent job at pointing out how the way sex education is approached in most places in the US is harmful and damaging.




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Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission.

Apr 23, 2012

Why I Teach Sex Ed: Knowledge is Power


I am a firm believer the knowledge is power.
Rachael Carlevale
Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains
www.pprm.org

I am a firm believer that knowledge is power. Teaching comprehensive, medically accurate, age appropriate sex education: healthy relationships, contraception, pregnancy options- that knowledge is LIFE SAVING power.  I feel as a sex education instructor, I am enabling students to make healthy informed decisions. Diving into the sexual past, a lot of this knowledge has been prohibited, taken on a political rollercoaster, grown and cultivated by motivated leaders such as Margaret Sanger and Malcolm X, and for that I am honored to be one of many whom bearthe fruits of knowledge of this sexual revolution.

As an educator, I travel a lot. Traveling allows me to reach remote areas with no resources and little education on health and sexuality. On one particular two hour mission to a remote high school with a very high teen pregnancy rate, my experiences with the students solidified why I am a sex education teacher and proud of it. That day I taught the basics- abstinence, what a healthy relationship should look like, how to obtain, use and talk to your partner about contraception and the realities of STDs. After the class a young female student came up to me and shook my hand. She thanked me and told me how nobody had ever taught her “that stuff” and that she thought she was pregnant.  Feelings of compassion and hope arose inside of me after she disclosed this information and I then provided her with the necessary resources for her inquiry.

The classes were separated by gender and after instructing the male group, a young man approached me and also shook my hand. “My dad always told me to pull out and hope for the best… I never knew there were so many birth control methods. I’m going to talk to my girlfriend about them. I think she might be pregnant.”

I remember in my high school, we did not receive any sex education at all. I was schooled by an upperclassman who took me to a nearby health center to learn of all my options. She was one of those exceptionally sweet girls who was nice to everybody, including me. High school always fosters difficult challenges no matter where you grow up and at my high school; it quickly became the ‘norm’ to be self conscious about your body, especially for developing females. Soon eating disorders were on the rise.  A good friend of mine was deeply affected and I felt an obligation to put a stop to all the negative body image nonsense. I started a group called “Peer-Health” for students to meet at lunch once a week and talk about teen issues, feeling good about the bodies we’re born in and how to stay healthy with a well-balanced nutritious diet. The group cultivated a sense of connection among people within the school and branched out to reach a variety of teen (and adult) issues such as how to cope with stress and another student even started a tutoring program for upperclassmen to instruct underclassmen.

The synchronicity of events in my high school led me to solidify my commitment to better the human condition. focused my studies on ecologically conscious approaches to human health and voluntarily instructed weekly yoga classes for my college peers. I now find myself sitting in an office prepping for the next sex education class, this time for middle school. By providing these students with the knowledge they need- personally empower individuals with life saving information- I know that the facts I provide will bring a human awareness that students will be able to radiate unto others and spread this conscious revolution.  

Apr 17, 2012

Profiling Great Sexuality Educators: Dr. Debby Herbenick



Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission.

On February 8th, the CSPH brought you Dr. Debby Herbenick (http://www.MySexProfessor.com/), and for an encore, here she is again!
1.  What do you do in the field of sexuality? I research, teach and write about sexuality. Specifically, I serve as the associate director and am a Research Scientist at The Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana University and as a sexual health educator at The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction.
I also write sex columns for The Kinsey Institute (Kinsey Confidential), Time Out Chicago (In&Out) and Men’s Health (Ask the Sex Professor). And I run a sex blog called MySexProfessor.com where I’m fortunate to work with several bloggers (mostly undergraduate and graduate students studying human sexuality topics).
Finally, I write books about sex, bodies and love – these include:
2.  Where are you based out of? Bloomington, Indiana
3.  What is your focus?  What do you do? The focus areas of my research related to:
  • the vulva and vagina (perceptions of these parts as well as health issues)
  • measure development (our research team prioritizes creating measures that help us to understand under-explored constructs such as genital self-image, attitudes about condoms, and condom fit and feel)
  • sexual pleasure and enhancement (e.g., understanding what sexual pleasure means to people, how female orgasm works, vibrator use, lubricant use, condom use and experiences)
The focus on my education work (teaching, writing columns and books, recording Kinsey Confidential podcasts) is about making information about sexuality and sexual health available to those who want it.
4.  What are your particular goals and passions in the field? I have fundamental curiosities about how sex functions in people’s day to day lives and how women and men create their own change independent of the latest greatest sex book, toy or piece of advice. I’m also extremely passionate about, and committed to, sharing sexuality information with individuals who want it. I like helping people find answers to their questions and talking with them about their sexual lives.
5.  Why did you choose to work in this field?  Twofold: (1) as long as I work in the field, we won’t know everything about sex so there is plenty for a curious, inquisitive person like me to “do” and (2) it remains an area of life that matters to most people and about which we’re still largely in the dark in many ways. I enjoy being one of many people who help turn on the lights.
6.  Where did you go for school/training? I graduated with a BA in Psychology from the University of Maryland, a master’s degree in public health from Indiana University and a doctoral degree in health behavior from Indiana University.
7.  Do you have any literature out (websites, articles)? Yes – I’m fortunate to be part of a productive research team at Indiana University. You can find a listing of our publications on our website. My blog is MySexProfessor.com and my books are Because It Feels GoodThe I Love You More BookRead My LipsThe Good in Bed Guide to Anal PleasuringGreat in Bed, and Sex Made Easy.
8.  What would you recommend to future sexologists attempting to get into the field? The same advice I would give to anyone in any field: do what you love for as long as you love doing it.
9.  What is the most challenging aspect for you working in this career? There aren’t enough hours in the day.
10.  One must read-what would you recommend?  Why? Kinsey’s Female volume: it’s full of interesting thoughts.



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Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission.

Apr 16, 2012

Why I Teach Sex Ed: The Breaking Point


Adrian Adekola
Community Educator
Planned Parenthood of WI



Why do I teach sexuality education? I choose to teach it for a multitude of reasons. Sexuality isn’t simply about whom you prefer to be intimate with or how one chooses to express themselves. It is something that continuously evolves from the time a woman is told the sex of her unborn child till the last breath is taken. My concern is the in between time. Growing up, sex and sexuality was the taboo topic in my parents’ home. Body parts were labeled “your private” and puberty was something to be figured out through trial and error. Unlike the teens I speak with in the schools, I didn’t receive the opportunity of having comprehensive sexuality education. I received fragmented messaging that included learning what made boys and girls physically different from each other in the fifth grade via a slide show and being told at home to “don’t do it”. If it wasn’t for paranoia and growing up in a strict home, I probably would have helped increase percentage of African American teenage pregnancy because I “just didn’t know”. It wasn’t until my freshman year of college in a Women Studies course that I truly learned about the umbrella of sexuality and how my body really worked. I choose to teach sexuality education because I want to give other youth of color, specifically African American girls the information and tools that I didn’t receive. I want youth to walk through each experience with their eyes wide open and their minds filled with knowledge.

Every year, new data is put out regarding sexual health. Each year, African Americans have the highest rates for everything you can think of from high blood pressure to sexually transmitted infections. It saddens me because everyone outside my community is willing to discuss it but those greatly affected are opting to remain silent. We want our voices to be heard but when it comes to our health and the health of the generations to come, we hear crickets. I’ve reached a breaking point of where being tired of the disparities is more than enough to make me want to us the bull horn of sexuality education to bring light to these issues. I recognize that change cannot happen overnight. Change comes with a gradual movement towards progress. For every person I have the opportunity to educate, I’ve made a few imprints towards progress

Apr 13, 2012

What does yours look like?

I can remember in high school (for me, 2000 - 2004... yes, I know) my German textbooks still had Germany as "West" & "East". The language didn't change, but... still...

So, if your "current" edition of "Teaching Safer Sex" looks like this (albeit a sold-out edition):

...You may wish to consider the new, expended 2-volume edition of "Teaching Safer Sex".



Why this edition? Glad you asked!

This is an expanded third edition of the original work by Peggy Brick and colleagues, which revolutionized safer sex education. If you are old enough to remember learning --- or teaching --- about the subject in the mid 1980s, you will surely remember an abundance of lectures about "t-cells" and "viral load".  This is how STI-prevention education was done in the early years of HIV.  Lots and lots of facts about a disease that everyone was just learning about, which really isn't useful the person that doesn't even know how to put on a condom.

Peggy went on to translate that information, helping students develop the the actual skills needed to practice safer sex, & take care of their sexual health.  Peggy and her colleagues developed highly engaging, interactive, vibrant lessons and activities that helped people become more comfortable talking about condoms and other aspects of sexual health.

The tradition of excellent programming has continued into this work. A comprehensive work that includes 50 lessons, exploring culture, inclusivity, relationships, sexting, sexual pleasure, and much more in an effort to continue to expand the scope of “sexual safety”.

But don't let us brag about our own work, others have already done that for us!

“Teaching Safer Sex is a welcome collection of lessons that skillfully combine the fundamentals of safer sex education with the bold inclusion of relevant, timely, nuanced topics not found in existing teaching and learning materials. Thanks for filling the gaps in the conventional wisdom of contemporary, comprehensive safer sex education. We expect nothing less from the trailblazing team at the Center for Family Life Education!”
Maria Bakaroudis, MA, CSE, PhD (c)
International Sexuality Educator &
United Nations Consultant


“The third edition of Teaching Safer Sex hits it out of the park! Or, perhaps better said, it nourishes everyone! Educators hungry for fresh facts and facilitation techniques will find it all here. And learners hungry for creative, energetic activities won’t be disappointed. Teaching Safer Sex reminds us that our most important sexual organ is…the brain!”
Kurt Conklin, MPH, MCHES
Director of Programs
Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS)
You may find more reviews by visiting:
http://www.sexedstore.com/?s=teaching


What about the content, you ask? Well, why don't I share a snapshot of the Table of Contents! The first 14 of 50 lessons are:
Volume 1   

Section 1: Sexual Health: An Overview
1. Defining Sexual Health
2. Sexual Health In Prime Time
3. I Feel Good! Sexual Pleasure…Definitions & Values
4. STI Bingo
5. Don’t Pass It Along!
6. The ABCs Of HPV
7. Safer Sex: The Basics


Section 2: Sexual Behaviors, Sexual Decisions
8. “You’re Out, Baseball!” A Healthier, More Equitable, Satisfying & Safer Model For Sexual Activity
9. Masturbation: A Safe, But Touchy Subject
10. Making Sense Of Abstinence
11. Oral Sex & Abstinence: Examining The Role Of Intimacy In Sexual Decisions
12. Figuring Out Outercourse
13. Securing The Back Door: A Guide To Safer Anal Sex
14. Sex, Drugs, & Healthy Decisions


That's just a teaser! If you'd like more information, or to order the volumes, please visit: http://www.sexedstore.com/teachingsafersex



Apr 11, 2012

Retirement Doesn't Mean "Stop having sex...": A PSA for Sexually Active Seniors

First, I highly recommend watching the PSA:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Pfa07ijUCE&noredirect=1

Now let's think about this: why are seniors having higher sexually transmitted infection (STI) rates? Well, when they were young "whippersnappers", at least 40-45 (for those around age 65 now) years ago, were sex ed and sexuality education as comphrensive as they are now? Not nearly. And, it was prior to HIV/AIDS in the late 80's.  So while they may (or may not) have been sexually monogamous with their significant others, time passes, things happen, and people separate. This could be divorce, or death, but they move on, and find other partners. Just because we retire, doesn't mean so does the desire.

So we know the how and why of it, and now we are doing something about it. Take a look at their webpage, http://safersex4seniors.org/, and spread the love! Safer-ly, of course.

Now, if they could get Betty White to be in a PSA....

Not Just for High School Anymore: Sex Ed Across the Lifespan – Interview with Bill Taverner


This article was originally published by American Social Health Association‘s HPV News, and has appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health. To register for a free email subscription to ASHA’s HPV News, visit them online.  and is adapted and reprinted with permission.
Not Just for High School Anymore: Sex Ed Across the Lifespan 
Interview with Bill Taverner
Bill Taverner
Sex ed. For many of us that conjures thoughts of the health or gym teacher fumbling through notes on the birds and the bees. The modern variety of sex ed has been much in the news the last few years, as abstinence-only education has received much attention (and many dollars, too).
Sex ed means much more than what adolescents might be learning in school, of course, and this is spurred by a growing realization that we need sexual health information our entire lives. The notion that older people have sex lives isn’t as quaint or as easily dismissed as in years past. The age of Viagra® allows countless men to stand at attention and report for duty even as they qualify for the senior menu at most any chain restaurant. Then there’s the phenomenon of “cougars” – older women hooking up with younger guys – that has such cultural cache it’s spawned everything from television shows to niche online dating sites. The idea that “40 is the new 30″ has been stretched to the point that even those in their sixth and seventh decades look, feel, and act “younger” than in generations past.
Those of us who were in sex ed classes in the Carter era and earlier recall that while we talked at length about pregnancy prevention, very little time was spent on sexually transmitted infections (STIs). For fellows in those generations, the sexual horror scenario involved knocking a girl up, not that they might get the clap while doing so. The girls probably felt much the same way. Those of us conditioned to think of condoms primarily as birth control, then, might find it easy to ditch what we called the “rubber insurance policy” as anxieties over unwanted pregnancy fade.
And what of sexuality issues beyond anatomy and physiology of doing the deed? Body image and relationship quality are also important. That’s a lot to deal with!
Bill Taverner, Director of the Center for Family Life Education, recently spoke with HPV News and shared his thoughts on the evolving world of sex ed, including the way we educate those in mid-life and beyond. The Center for Family Life Education (part of one of the very top Planned Parenthoods in the country) will host its 26th annual SEX ED conference on December 7-9 in Somerset, NJ. Themed “Sex Ed Through the Lifespan,” the conference will feature four expert keynote speakers, an array of 42 concurrent workshops accepted through peer review, and a screening of the documentary film “Let’s Talk about Sex”.
Thinking about the theme of this year’s conference, Sex ed throughout the lifespan, how do we talk to people in their 40s, 50s, and beyond about sex. What is it we need to offer them?
Not all adults understand that their sexuality changes as they grow older. Their bodies change, their sexual response changes, their relationships often change, as may their attitudes and values. Changes are often addressed through a “problem lens,” with pharmaceuticals as the solution. So older adults are expecting their bodies to perform as they did when they were 18. The changes are not only physical, but also emotional and relational. The needs one may have had from a partner in their 20s may not be the same as the needs they have in their 40s, 50s, or beyond.
Adults need opportunities to re-evaluate a lifetime of formal and informal sexual learning for how it fits within their current lives, and determine which is helpful, and discard that which is not helpful. Peggy Brick, lead author of Older, Wiser, Sexually Smarter, will lead this discussion in her keynote on helping adults form new expectations of their changing bodies and lives.
We’re still squeamish when it comes to talking about S-E-X, right? It even impacts our ability to have important discussions with health care providers! How do we make this a normal, relaxed topic of discussion?
Robie Harris, our opening keynote speaker, is the author of perhaps the most authoritative children’s book on sex, It’s Perfectly Normal. This is a book that has been translated into many languages, and I came across the Swedish version when I visited Stockholm last year. The Swedish title, PÃ¥ Tal Om Sex, bore little resemblance to the American title, so I asked the librarian about it. She told me the title meant “Speaking of Sex”. This spoke volumes of the differences in how Americans and Sweden — and many other developed nations treat the subject of sex. Swedes need no convincing that sex is perfectly normal! The title only works in the United States!
It’s a byproduct of decades of societal and cultural learning. Unlike many Western European nations, America has not prioritized honest communication about sexuality on television, in print, in social media campaigns. Two decades of $1.5 billion in federal abstinence-only funds —- in a country where 70% of teens stop abstaining by the time they finish high school — means that we as a nation have a lot of catching up to do. Highly-trained sexuality educators — such as Planned Parenthood educators and other professionals who attend our conference — can be a great support for young people to have not only accurate information, but better efficacy and the skills to make healthy sexual decisions.
There’s so much to address in sex ed: sexually transmitted infections (STIs), unintended pregnancy, health relationships. How do you cover it all without people – especially school-age audiences – tuning out?
The tiny amount of time teachers are given for these important topics often forces them to use boring, didactic teaching techniques. That is why The CFLE develops teaching manuals that use highly interactive, engaging strategies. One such resource, coming out in January, is titled Game On! and has 20 such strategies for creating a fun, memorable learning experience that really sticks with the student. It’s important to reach students in meaningful ways so they retain important learning, and feel empowered with the skills needed to make healthy decisions.
Talk about trends in teaching sexual education to teens. How are our approaches changing?
Earlier this week, the New York Times Magazine posted an article that featured an educator who is doing an outstanding job teaching a sex education program at a private Quaker school. The teacher, Al Vernacchio, was a speaker at our conference last year, and will present the workshop “You’re Out, Baseball!” at this year’s conference.
His program was unique in that it is so positive, honest, and complete! It is also not the norm. While Mr. Vernacchio’s program runs six weeks, most American teachers are allowed only a few class periods. Depending on the state and school district, these lessons may be devoted to preaching abstinence as the only acceptable choice, or, if the program is permitted to address prevention of pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, they rarely venture beyond these subjects into other important, healthy aspects of sexuality. Important elements include healthy and unhealthy relationships, gender and sexual orientation, intimacy body image, and much more.
There are some positive trends, for example new, first-time federal funding for evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention programs. While these programs fall short of complete, age-appropriate sex ed, the new funding is encouraging after two decades of funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs (AOUM). Still, it is disappointing that federal funding for AOUM persists, despite substantial research that they provide misleading, inaccurate, and harmful information.
Sex ed is also needed beyond the high school years, especially when the curricula are woefully inadequate in the high schools. Many of our conference attendees teach adults – from college students in their 20s to senior citizens. That’s why we adopted a theme of Sex Ed Through the Lifespan. For more go to: The CFLE’s Sex Ed Conference.

Apr 10, 2012

Profiling Great Sexuality Educators: Bill Taverner


Welcome to Profiling Great Sexuality Educators! This is the first of many! Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission. And what better way that to start off this weekly post than with the interview with our very own Bill Taverner!
What do you do in the field of sexuality?
I am the executive director of The Center for Family Life Education, a national sexuality education organization housed at Planned Parenthood of Greater Northern New Jersey. I am also the editor of the American Journal of Sexuality Education.
Where are you based out of?
The CFLE is located in Morristown, NJ.
What is your focus?  What do you do?
At The CFLE, my colleagues and I develop sexuality education manuals that are used internationally. Currently we are launching two new manuals: Game On! The Ultimate Sexuality Education Gaming Guide and also the third edition of Teaching Safer Sex.
We train professionals nationwide, host an annual sexuality education conference, and have robust local sexuality education programs.
What are your particular goals and passions in the field?
People of all ages are deserving of complete and accurate sexuality education. We need to improve access to sexuality education for people of all ages.
Why did you choose to work in this field?
When I took my first college course in human sexuality, I was fascinated with my own lack of knowledge about sexuality. Who knew there was so much to know? That was a primary reason I continued to study – that there was so much to learn, and so much of it was so interesting.
My first professional job in sexuality was with Phoenix House, which provides treatment for people recovering from substance abuse. I was hired to develop their sexuality education and training programs and I quickly learned about the impact poverty and drugs could have on sexual decision-making. (And conversely, how various factors associated with sexuality – sexual abuse, sexual shame, sexual coercion, and more – could lead to substance abuse).  This experience cemented my belief that complete, accurate sexuality education is an essential ingredient in the formation of healthy lives.
Where did you go for school/training?
For my undergraduate studies, I was a student at the University at Albany in New York. Then I studied in the now-defunct graduate program in human sexuality at New York University. I also studied in a graduate cross-cultural program in Copenhagen, Denmark.
How did you get to where you are?
Oh, this is a long answer! Long enough for a paper that I wrote, with recommendations for emerging sexologists! See Tips for Emerging Sexology Professionals: Networking and Nurturing.
What would you recommend to future sexologists attempting to get into the field?
I have lots of recommendations! See my article! But to sum it all up here: Hang in there, and be strategic!
What is the most challenging aspect for you working in this career?
The organized and systematic efforts – by a comparative few – to control the sexuality of all Americans and dictate their sexual decisions.
One must read-what would you recommend?  Why?
I highly recommend reading “America’s War on Sex” by Marty Klein. One cannot be an effective sexuality educator without understanding the socio-cultural backdrop in which we teach.
Do you have any literature out where we could learn more about your work?
One of the resources I am proud of is a manual I co-authored, Older, Wiser, Sexually Smarter,” a sex ed manual for older adults. See http://www.sexuallysmarter.com.
The book, co-authored with Peggy Brick, Jan Lunquist, and Allyson Sandak, is significant in that it expands sexuality to people of all ages.
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Profiling Great Sexuality Educators includes interviews that originally appeared on the website of The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health and is adapted and reprinted with permission.