Guest guest Posted November 26, 2001 Report Share Posted November 26, 2001 School students get all they wanted to know about sex The Indian Express 25 November, 2001-New Delhi PUJA BIRLA NEW DELHI NOVEMBER 24- If the number of questions asked by boisterous Class IX students at AIDS awareness programme is anything to go by, schools in the Capital have an uphill task. With no sex education classes to clear their doubts, students are using AIDS awareness programmes, conducted by NGOs, as a guide to dispel myths about the birds and the bees. Coordinators from the Rai Bahadur gujarmal Modi (RBGM) Foundation say that school students come up with the most pertinent of questions-a reflection of the prudish attitudes prevalent in homes and educational institutions. « I have to deal with questions ranging from how does one use a condom to where is GB Road, » says a coordinator from RBGM « They have no other source of correct information. Parents don " t talk about it and in the classroom, such topics are merely skimmed through. Even though the human reproductive system is there as a chapter in biology, most teachers will either skip it completely or barely glance at it. The situation is even more regressive in co-education schools, » he says. Thus coordinators become the only people who will provide correct information. « Information from friends is unbelievably skewed and fantastic. But no one wants to own up that he doesn " t know a particular thing, " remarks another coordinator who has been involved in programmes conducted in private as well as government schools. 'There as an intersting difference in attitude that one encounters. Government school students usually come from traditional middle and lower-middle class families that keep a tight hold over 'values.' These kids feel that the reasons for contracting HIV through sexual contact doesn't hold true for them because they are brought up with traditional mores of celibacy and fidelity. They are more interested in knowing how to treat and behave with an HIV-infected person,' says the coordinator. On the other hand, the questions from public school students are mostly centred around sex and the ways of practising it safely. They are not very emphatic about celibacy and virginity and invariably most of the boys ask how they could prevent a girl from getting pregnant. In all their workshops, a basic orientation is done starting from relationships, peer pressure, attractions and the need to prove that the students are mature adults. Gradually the concept of sexual attraction si introduced and from it the possibility of contracting the deadly virus. There is information on how it spreads and the tests that show conclusively whether a person is HIV positive or not. The most important part of the wordshops are the question and answer sessions, both for the coordinators as well as the students. Though there are sniggerings and smirks and nudges, the answers are carefully listened to. And sometimes even the coordinators are stumpted by the queries of their young audience. One of the RBGM coordinators remembers having to answer a question as to why a man could not have baby especially since a Hollywood movie discussed the possibility with none other than macho man Arnold Schwarzenegger playing the lead. 'We just had to tell the student that it was the way God decided and the rest was only make-believe,' said the coordinator. ******************************************************************** Jagdish Harsh ( jharsh@... ) François-Xavier Bagnoud (INDIA) ( www.fxb.org ) ____________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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