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Lost Children

January 12, 2000 • Ronald L. Dart

I really hate to tell you this, but I think we did a better job of sex education back in the 1940s than you folks are doing today. Now, in case you are scratching your head and saying, “But they didn’t *have* sex education in the schools back then!”, let me assure you that you are right. And there is a very strong case that no sex education at all may be better than the sex education that is in today’s schools.

Now before you write me a letter, stop and think about how you would evaluate that statement—how you would judge it. What I’m looking at is *results*: the number of teenage pregnancies, the occurrence of venereal disease, and so on. If you are looking at results, sex education has been *worse that useless*.

I consider all this and recall that sex education in the 40s took place on the playground, with little or no guidance from adults, and I want to know how come you folks today can’t do a *better job* than we were doing. Because your programs today have been an abject failure, and you know it. Let’s discuss one concept in particular that I believe is missing in sex education today.

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