Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Risky Lessons
Risky Lessons: Sex Education and Social Inequality | Jessica Fields
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
Curricula in U.S. public schools are often the focus of heated debate, and few subjects spark more controversy than sex education. While conservatives argue that sexual abstinence should be the only message, liberals counter that an approach that provides comprehensive instruction and helps young people avoid sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy is necessary. Caught in the middle are the students and teachers whose everyday experiences of sex education are seldom as clear-cut as either side of the debate suggests.Risky Lessons brings readers inside three North Carolina middle schools to show how students and teachers support and subvert the official curriculum through their questions, choices, viewpoints, and reactions. Most important, the book highlights how sex education's formal and informal lessons reflect and reinforce gender, race, and class inequalities.Ultimately critical of both conservative and liberal approaches, Fields argues for curricula that promote social and sexual justice. Sex education's aim need not be limited to reducing the risk of adolescent pregnancies, disease, and sexual activity. Rather, its lessons should help young people to recognize and contend with sexual desires, power, and inequalities.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
PerksOfBeingABookworm
post image
Pickpick

Finally finished this book. I‘ve been reading it off and on for months. (I think that‘s due to school burn out on my part). This book is a good resource if you want to learn about debates around sex ed and how we continually produce social inequalities in the classroom. It is 10 years old, so some info is outdated, but unfortunately a lot of this still occurs today. Continued below...

PerksOfBeingABookworm One complaint that I had, is the use of the word “transgendered.” Yes, the book is a decade old. However, I don‘t really accept this excuse. Just like we don‘t use the words “Blacked” or “Latinoed” or “gayed,” it doesn‘t make sense to use the word “transgendered.” It‘s not something that happens to you, it‘s part of who you are as a person. And that concludes my rant. My apologies. 5y
readordierachel Good point! 5y
Suet624 Yes, good point. 5y
69 likes1 stack add3 comments