American Student Sex
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American Student Sex
By
Daniel Villarreal
On 10/26/21 at 11:35 PM EDT
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A social media video clip reportedly showing two students having sex in a Maryland high school classroom is under investigation by school officials and legal authorities.
The incident occurred in a classroom within Woodlawn High School, a school in the Baltimore County town of Gwynn Oak. Upon learning of the video, Principal Jamel Jernigan alerted parents in an October 8 letter. The letter has only recently been reported by local media.
"I was recently made aware of a social media post of a video involving Woodlawn High School students engaged in highly inappropriate behavior while in class," the letter said, according to WJZ-TV.
"An investigation is underway with school administration, our [Baltimore County Public Schools] safety manager and the Baltimore County Police Department," the letter continued.
Jernigan's letter didn't specify how many students were involved, their ages or the date of the incident. A student is believed to have recorded the incident, the aforementioned news outlet noted. It's also unclear if the alleged sex act or the reposting of the video constituted crimes.
The principal's letter did state, however, that students could be subject to possible disciplinary action if their behavior was found to be "inappropriate for the school environment."
The school has reportedly declined to comment on the case beyond acknowledging the existence of the principal's letter.
Newsweek contacted the Baltimore County Police Department for comment.
The recording and transfer of sexual content between teens have become more common as more teens own smartphones, the journal Pediatrics reported in May 2019.
At least 1 in 4 teens has received sexually explicit texts or emails, according to an April 2018 study published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics . Approximately 1 in 12 teens has forwarded sexual content to others without the consent of the sexual partners involved, the study added.
Sometimes sexual content is sent out to others as a form of cyberbullying known as "revenge porn." Revenge porn, which can originate from a former sexual partner or someone else who recorded other people's sex acts without their knowledge, is often meant to shame sexual partners.
U.S. state laws on teen sexting vary widely from state to state. The laws and their application depend on several factors. Those factors include the age of the people involved, the explicitly graphic nature of the content itself and how widely the content is shared.
Some states have decriminalized the production and sharing of teenage sexual content between teens, as long as the creation and sharing are consensual. Other states punish teen sexting as a misdemeanor charge or with felony child pornography charges.
Maryland has laws forbidding revenge porn, according to Cyberbulling.org. Maryland teens who engage in sexting can receive up to 20 years in prison and a lifetime sexual offender status for producing or possessing teen sexual content, the Pediatrics article noted.
"Interestingly, in these states, a teen sexter can be charged as both an offender and a victim," the article said.
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sex on campus
Oct. 20, 2015
The Sex Habits of 784 College Students
From Harvard to the University of Minnesota to San Diego State.
Photo: Ann Singer, Boston University, class of 2017
College Students
NY Mag readers
12-15
15-18
18-20
20-23
I'm a virgin
College Students
NY Mag readers
College Students
NY Mag readers
Daily
Several times a week
Several times a month
Several times a year
Less than once a year
Other
College Students
NY Mag readers
Rejection
Coercion
Performance
Other
Rejection
Coercion
Performance
Other
College Students
NY Mag readers
Yes (Nonvirgins)
No (Nonvirgins)
Yes (Virgins)
No (Virgins)
Under a week
1 to 2 weeks
2 weeks to a month
Longer than a month
Other
0
1-5
5-10
10-20
20-30
Over 30
Freshman/Sophomore
Junior/Senior
1-2 drinks
3-4 drinks
More than 6 drinks
I don't drink
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To get a feel for national trends in college sex, we partnered with SurveyMonkey to survey students from diverse backgrounds at a wide range of four-year colleges and universities all over the country — from Harvard to the University of Minnesota to San Diego State. A couple of caveats: The poll was designed by journalists, not social scientists. So on the controversial question of sexual assault, we rather bluntly asked respondents whether they’d been raped, while most public-health surveys instead describe the act of forced sex in a number of different ways and over a series of questions.
Far more people will say that they’ve experienced rape if you don’t actually ask them to identify as rape survivors, so fewer students said they’ve been raped in our survey than have in recent national campus studies. (However, a high percentage of people in our survey said they know other students who have been sexually assaulted.) Also, despite our best efforts to get an even gender split, more women responded to the poll — it turns out that the difficulty of getting young men to sit still for a survey is a well-known problem.
There were a lot of things that interested us about the findings: College women, as a group, have a significant fear of sexual coercion; men, by contrast, overwhelmingly fear rejection — and are approximately twice as afraid of poor performance in bed as women are. But the thing that intrigued us most was that for all the narrative dominance of “hookup culture,” the students who replied to our survey were surprisingly sexually conservative.
Skip down to the student sex life data ↓
If you are not a virgin, how often do you have sex?
Do you think you’re having more sex or less sex than your friends?
How long do you think you need to know someone before you have sex with them?
What is your biggest fear when it comes to dating and sex?
If you are not a virgin, have you ever felt that a sexual partner crossed a line?
Your results relative to the surveyed students and other New York Magazine readers are marked in orange .
1.) When did you lose your virginity?
4.) Do you think you’re having more sex or less sex than your friends?
5.) How long do you think you need to know someone before you have sex with them?
6.) What is your biggest fear when it comes to dating and sex?
7.) If you're sexually active, have you ever felt that a sexual partner crossed a line?
Nearly 40 percent of the students we surveyed said they are virgins. Still, most people thought everyone else was having tons of sex.
How long do you think you need to know someone before you have sex with them?
How many sex partners do you think you should have before marriage?
Not surprisingly, more women than men report that a sexual partner has crossed the line, but almost as many men as women know someone who has been raped.
Do you know someone who has been raped?
Do you think your school does a good job of handling rape reporting?
How much do you typically drink on a night out?
Relationships are not dead: 69 percent of respondents said they have had one that lasted longer than a year. And almost everyone plans to get married someday.
What’s the longest relationship you’ve had?
Do you think you’ll get married someday?
*This article appears in the October 19, 2015 issue of New York Magazine.
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Any one-on-one encounter with romantic potential
Published July 25, 2017 2:35pm EDT
By
Hollie McKay , | Fox News
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Hollie McKay has a been a Fox News Digital staff reporter since 2007. She has extensively reported from war zones including Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Burma, and Latin America investigates global conflicts, war crimes and terrorism around the world. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @holliesmckay
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