Parents are to lose the right to withdraw their child from sex education classes when the youngster reaches 15, the Schools Secretary announced today. The move means all teenagers will receive at least one year's worth of lessons covering sex, contraception and relationships before the age of consent.
Parents are to lose the right to withdraw their child from sex education classes when the youngster reaches 15, the Schools Secretary announced today.
The move means all teenagers will receive at least one year's worth of lessons covering sex, contraception and relationships before the age of consent.
Plus I bet there are no condom machines for kids, they sure as heck won't buy them in chemists. keep to the Fen Causeway
most kids? waaaay before then?
That seems to be two rather big overstatements. The median age still is about 17, and even for those who started younger, it can't be MUCH younger than 14 for biological reasons. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
Still, I read something the other day, that people on average start having sex at 16-17, and that only one in ten have had sex at age 14. Which is probably why everyone felt that they were the only one who hadn't had sex when they were 14. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
Maybe it's pollution? Maybe social changes lead the brain to delay it. I don't really know, but so far I had only ever read that people used to hit puberty younger in the past. Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed. Gandhi
Timing of the onset of puberty The definition of the onset of puberty depends on perspective (e.g., hormonal versus physical) and purpose (establishing population normal standards, clinical care of early or late pubescent individuals, etc.) The most commonly used definition of the onset of puberty is physical changes to a person's body[citation needed]. These physical changes are the first visible signs of neural, hormonal, and gonadal function changes. The age at which puberty begins varies between individuals and populations. The age at which puberty begins is affected by both genetic factors and by environmental factors such as nutritional state and social circumstances.[1] The average age at which puberty begins is affected by your race. For example, the average age of menarche in various populations surveyed[weasel words] has ranged from 12 to 18 years. The earliest average onset of puberty is for African-American girls and the oldest average onset for high altitude subsistence populations in Asia. However, much of the higher age averages reflect nutritional limitations more than genetic differences and can change within a few generations with a substantial change in diet. The median age of menarche for a population may be an index of the proportion of undernourished girls in the population, and the width of the spread may reflect unevenness of wealth and food distribution in a population. Researchers have identified an earlier age of the onset of puberty. However, they have based their conclusions on a comparison of data from 1999 with data from 1969. In the earlier example, the sample population was based on a small sample of white girls (200, from Britain). The later study identified as puberty as occurring in 48% of African-American girls by age nine, and 12% of white girls by that age.[34] Historical shift The average age at which the onset of puberty occurs has dropped significantly since the 1840s.[35][36][37] Researchers[who?] refer to this drop as the 'secular trend'. In every decade from 1840 to 1950 there was a drop of four months in the average age of menarche among Western European females. In Norway, girls born in 1840 had their menarche at an average age of 17 years. In France the average in 1840 was 15.3 years. In England the average in 1840 was 16.5 years. In Japan the decline happened later and was then more rapid: from 1945 to 1975 in Japan there was a drop of 11 months per decade.
The definition of the onset of puberty depends on perspective (e.g., hormonal versus physical) and purpose (establishing population normal standards, clinical care of early or late pubescent individuals, etc.) The most commonly used definition of the onset of puberty is physical changes to a person's body[citation needed]. These physical changes are the first visible signs of neural, hormonal, and gonadal function changes.
The age at which puberty begins varies between individuals and populations. The age at which puberty begins is affected by both genetic factors and by environmental factors such as nutritional state and social circumstances.[1]
The average age at which puberty begins is affected by your race. For example, the average age of menarche in various populations surveyed[weasel words] has ranged from 12 to 18 years. The earliest average onset of puberty is for African-American girls and the oldest average onset for high altitude subsistence populations in Asia. However, much of the higher age averages reflect nutritional limitations more than genetic differences and can change within a few generations with a substantial change in diet. The median age of menarche for a population may be an index of the proportion of undernourished girls in the population, and the width of the spread may reflect unevenness of wealth and food distribution in a population.
Researchers have identified an earlier age of the onset of puberty. However, they have based their conclusions on a comparison of data from 1999 with data from 1969. In the earlier example, the sample population was based on a small sample of white girls (200, from Britain). The later study identified as puberty as occurring in 48% of African-American girls by age nine, and 12% of white girls by that age.[34] Historical shift
The average age at which the onset of puberty occurs has dropped significantly since the 1840s.[35][36][37] Researchers[who?] refer to this drop as the 'secular trend'. In every decade from 1840 to 1950 there was a drop of four months in the average age of menarche among Western European females. In Norway, girls born in 1840 had their menarche at an average age of 17 years. In France the average in 1840 was 15.3 years. In England the average in 1840 was 16.5 years. In Japan the decline happened later and was then more rapid: from 1945 to 1975 in Japan there was a drop of 11 months per decade.
But I guess no one should be surprised when something is influenced both bu genes and the local environment, after all, what isn't? Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
How do you separate the effect of genes and different social situations?... *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
people started having sex a lot earlier a few hundred years ago (when people die at 30, they'd better)
Where did you get that from? Do you mean people started having sex before puberty?
As for "when people die at 30", that's a common misunderstanding of life expectancy at birth statistics. Life expectancy at birth of 40 (the most common figure quoted for Early Modern Europe) does not mean everyone dies at 40. It's an average, and the reason it's so low is infantile mortality. At birth, you had a fairly high chance of dying in the first week of life, (first year, first ten years). But if you got through to 30 you had a decent chance of reaching 60 or 70.
No, that wouldn't make much sense, would it? But certainly earlier than the current 17. IIRC the age of consent was considerable lower in the olden days, in spite of people hitting puberty later than they do today, because of worse nutrition. Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
I remember a story about Blair going into talk to a load of 14 year olds in a school and he was talking up sex education under labour and the firls just laughed and said 6 girls in their class had had kids before the much-trumpeted sex education even happened.
Problem is that we don't copy countries who do it right. And the reason is cos our so-called anglo-saxon morality is offended by the idea of teaching kids about sex at an age where it might help. We wait until they're sort-of adult cos that's when parents want their kids to learn, when it's actually too late for immature children who've already done the experimenting. And some of them, too many of them, pay the price for that. keep to the Fen Causeway
Parents are to lose the right to withdraw their child from sex education classes
Isn't anyone else bothered by this frame? The fact is that what we're experiencing right now is a top-down disaster. -Paul Krugman