LinkTexas Sex-Ed Texts Barely Mention Contraceptives
Fri Nov 5, 2004 07:07 PM ET
By Jon Herskovitz
DALLAS (Reuters) - Texas education officials on Friday approved health textbooks for high school students that extol the virtues of sexual abstinence but only make passing mention of contraceptives, which critics say violates state regulations and endangers the health of teens.
The battle in Texas has national implications because the state is the second-biggest market for textbooks in the United States. Books approved by the state's school board are typically marketed nationally.
The 15-member Texas Board of Education approved four books, all of which promote a birth control program based on abstinence. Three make no mention of contraceptives, while one makes passing references to condoms.
State regulations require information on contraceptives to be included in the sexual education curriculum, but board members said the books meet state standards because contraceptives are mentioned in separate supplements or in the teacher's edition.
Critics said the board bowed to social conservatives and their approval will leave Texas teens with inadequate information about their health.
"Instead of doing the responsible thing and providing high school students with life-saving information about sex and health, the Board of Education has left them to fend for themselves and get information from each other and sources like the Internet and MTV," said Samantha Smoot, president of the Texas Freedom Network, which battles social conservatives.
The texts are likely to appear in classrooms in August 2005 -- where they could be the standard text for about 10 years. The publishers of the books are Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Glencoe/McGraw Hill and Thomson Delmar Learning, which is owned by the Thomson Corp . Holt is owned by Reed Elsevier PLC and Reed Elsevier NV .
Many current textbooks in Texas have more information on contraceptives than the ones the board approved.
Surveys indicate a wide majority of U.S. parents support a strong abstinence message to teens in sex education.
According to Centers for Disease Control figures, Texas has been among the top five states in the country for teenage pregnancies for several years.
When he was governor of Texas, George W. Bush pushed for an abstinence-based sexual education curriculum.
The board also asked on Friday for a change in the definition of marriage for separate middle school health books after a conservative member of the board said new language was needed to replace code words she thought promoted a homosexual agenda.
Board member Terri Leo, a Republican, said terms such as "couples" and "adults" should be replaced with terms such as: husband, wife, mother and father. She wanted to make sure the textbooks did not advocate same-sex marriage.
The board approve language saying: "Marriage is a life-long union between a husband and wife."
The board rejected a proposal from Leo asking for language saying: "homosexuals, lesbians and bisexuals as a group are more prone to self-destructive behavior like depression, illegal drug use and suicide."
Why am I not surprised... Crappy ass-backwards state, we should've never annexed them.