1. Need my pieces of advice
2. Shared serious problem with friends
3. Listen and watch to pornographic materials like (forn movies, scandals etc.).
4. Serous any kind of relationship
5. Have a relationship in opposite sex
6. Want always to be IN or socializes other
7. Ask about sexuality
8. Engage in mating
9. Show their curiosity about sex
10. Permit to kiss her/his boyfriend/girlfriend to kiss each other.
Parents as Advocates for Comprehensive Sex Ed in Schools
Parental support for school-based sex education is overwhelmingly positive. Over the past 20 years, in survey after survey, local, state or national, 80 to 85 percent of parents indicate they want their children to receive comprehensive, medically accurate, age-appropriate sex education. Parents see such courses and content as supplementing, not supplanting, their discussions at home. They say that their children need both to be taught about delaying the onset of intimate sexual relationships until they are mature and responsible and also given the information and skills they need to use condoms and contraception when they do choose to become sexually active. It's not either/or, but both.
Parents' involvement in school health education committees, as members of school boards, or as advocates during community controversy is vital to making sure that young people receive accurate information and that answers to their questions are not censored. Many curricula and classroom materials exist to meet children's needs and help them grow up sexually healthy. But there are also "education" materials that are discriminatory, inaccurate, biased, and judgmental, and that use shame, fear, and guilt to scare young people about sexual intimacy.
Sexuality education curricula and programs should be reviewed carefully for the following important components:
Acknowledging that sexuality is a component of each person's personality, character, and life