Group Sex For College Students

Group Sex For College Students




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Group Sex For College Students
College is a time of discovery for students – to expand their intellectual horizons as they pursue postsecondary education. It’s also a time where the quest for knowledge doesn’t just end with their field of study . For many students, there is an extracurricular focus on intimacy in the pursuit of carnal knowledge. The movies don’t lie – though they may potentially exaggerate – when it comes to the amount of sex college students have .
We conducted a survey of 2,000 current and former college students to take a snapshot of activity between the sheets on U.S. campuses . We learned about the frequency of intercourse, the most sexually active campuses, the average number of partners, and the use of protection. Read on to see what sex really looks like on college campuses .
Want to see just how far your sexual escapades reach ? Use this interactive tool originally built by Dr. Ed that we modified to calculate your college sexual exposure. Select your school and enter the number of partners you and your partners have been with. You can even compare that exposure rate to the total population of some major metropolitan areas to help put it into perspective.
Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania may have been founded by a Baptist minister in 1884 , but today it’s the most sexually active campus. Temple University, with its population of more than 37,000 students, takes advantage of its urban location in the heart of Philadelphia by doing a different kind of social study between classes.
Rutgers University , in New Jersey, ranked as the second most sexually active group of students. Rutgers students may not watch their Scarlet Knights win very often , but there are plenty of online suggestions about the best places to get intimate on campus if they do decide to skip a game.
Three Florida schools – Florida State University, the University of Central Florida, and the University of Florida – also made the list. Students at these schools may consider themselves fierce rivals , but they should at least be able to agree on the joys of sexual exploration.
Other notable colleges and universities that had a friskier student body included Cornell University , Michigan State University , and the University of Connecticut .
When we asked our respondents what their “numbers” were, men told us they’d had an average of about 14 sexual partners at the time of our survey, while women told us they’d had fewer than 12 . When we asked about their time in college, men and women actually had about the same number of unique sexual encounters, each averaging close to 5 .
For women, that means close to 43 percent of their total number of sexual partners came from their time at college or university. For men, their time in college only represented 35 percent of their total sexual experiences.
While students exploring sexual relationships may be looking for pleasure or love, their college education may be able to help them in more ways than one. Studies have found that women with a college level education are more likely to be married longer than those without. While roughly 40 percent of women with a high school education or less remain married more than 20 years, nearly 80 percent of college-educated women studied were found to have marriages that lasted longer than 20 years .
After one great night, you may not feel the need to get tested or worry about sexually transmitted diseases. But every time you sleep with one person, it’s likely they’re not the only person in the room .
For every 13 sexual partners you sleep with, those partners would have been exposed to a similar amount of intercourse – so you, plus twelve others (on average). This means that even though you may have only slept with 13 people, you’re indirectly exposed to over 150 sexual partners .
As you remain sexually active, it becomes even more important for you to practice safe sex. Establishing positive sexual behaviors early on can prevent sexually transmitted diseases, such as HIV or chlamydia.
There are plenty of extremely smart students on college campuses, studying everything from applied mathematics to biomedical engineering, but using contraceptives during sex is ultimately the smartest decision . However, it seems that some students may be missing this piece of knowledge. Contraceptives like condoms go beyond preventing unwanted pregnancies, as discussed by Planned Parenthood . They also help prevent unwanted sexually transmitted diseases.
Over 15 percent of respondents surveyed shared they never use a condom. Those who reported not using a condom also had close to 18 partners on average versus almost 13 partners for those who always use protection.
It may be that they didn’t receive the appropriate education prior to college. Over $2 billion has been spent on abstinence-only education by the federal government in the last 25 years – programs deemed to be largely ineffective. Officials have called for their removal per the 2017 federal budget proposal.
Sexual exploration on college campuses is happening. On average, students will have sex with close to five partners during their two or four years enrolled in postsecondary education.
Let’s face it, students have a sexual consciousness all their own. For more information on what life is like on campuses across America, head to CollegeStats.org for the best snapshot of the modern-day college experience .
We surveyed 2,000 current and former college students to find out about their sexual habits, including how many sexual partners they’ve had in total and how many they had while in college.
We established sexual exposure formulas for a finite geometric series :
“Degree of Exposure” is how many steps of separation exist within your range of indirect partners. A degree of exposure of “1” is the number of partners you have had, while a degree of exposure of “2” is the number of partners you have had plus all your partner’s partners – and so on.

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Brittni Colleps defends herself in an exclusive interview with Deborah Roberts.
Sept. 28, 2012 — -- It was perhaps the most salacious part of one of the most scandalous student-teacher affair stories in history: a video, taken by a cellphone camera, of then-Texas high school teacher Brittni Colleps having group sex with four 18- and 19-year-old students at her suburban home.
But Colleps, who is 28 and the mother of three young children, says that video -- taken by one of the students -- makes her a victim.
"I felt like I was victimized in that video, because I did not, I never gave my consent for it," Colleps told "20/20" correspondent Deborah Roberts in an exclusive jailhouse interview airing tonight on "20/20." Roberts also spoke exclusively to Colleps' husband, Christopher, who explained why he is standing by his wife.
In August, a jury convicted Colleps on 16 counts of having improper relationships with students. Though the students with whom she had sex -- there were five -- were all older than the minimum age of consent in Texas, state law prohibits any educator in a primary or secondary school from having sex with any enrolled student, no matter their age.
Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Beach prosecuted Colleps' case and defended the law in an interview with "20/20."
"Who has more power in the classroom?" she asked. "Does the teacher have more power or does the students have more power? The teacher has more power. And so the teacher can use that power to sexually exploit students in the classroom, even if those students are 18 years old."
The story of how Colleps went from popular teacher to convicted felon begins with a seemingly innocent text message -- one sent by Colleps to a school athlete asking what time a baseball game was starting.
But in the weeks that followed, as court documents would show, Colleps exchanged 300 pages worth of text messages with the student, most of which were sexual in nature.
"Sitting in the classroom, she goes into these very specific sexual text messages about the things she wants him to do to her body," Beach said. The texts included messages like "I'm an anything goes in sex kinda girl" and "I like pullin' hair, bitin', scratchin', spanking, I even like being choked."
In April 2011, Colleps invited the athlete to her home to watch a movie. They ended up having sex, and the student reportedly returned to her home at least four more times.
The following May, he brought three friends -- all football players -- to Colleps' home for dinner.
But prosecutors say the students got more than just a home-cooked meal. Colleps reportedly put on lingerie, brought out sex toys and led the four young men to her bedroom.
"And she's performing one sex act on one student, and she is simultaneously performing another sex act on another student, and she has farmed out her kids for the night so that she can have four students in, and engage in what is more or less an orgy," Beach said.
That was when one of the students captured the trysts on a cellphone camera, and he didn't keep it to himself. It soon became fodder for hallway gossip that spread to administrators at Colleps' school. Colleps was called to the principal's office and, five days later, arrested.
Last month, before the jury convicted her, it heard explicit and damning testimony.
"She said that she craved...that I had something she wanted," one of Colleps' teenage sex partners testified.
But some of the students also said in court that they didn't feel like victims and that they were happy to be at Colleps' home the night of the encounter. One, according to Colleps' lawyer, said he wanted to testify on his teacher's behalf.
"They didn't feel like I victimized them. They didn't feel like victims, you know, last year, they don't feel like victims now. And they didn't want anything to happen to me either," Colleps said.
But something did happen -- after her conviction, Colleps was sentenced to five years in jail. The sentence came despite pleas for leniency from Colleps' husband. Christopher Colleps, 31, was serving as an army specialist in Louisiana when he learned of his wife's deceit.
He called the news of her betrayal the "toughest thing I've ever had to hear," but said he nonetheless stands by his wife. She doesn't, he said, deserve jail time.
"When our children get old enough, she has to look them in the eye and tell them what she did. That is punishment," he said.
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College students nationwide are heading back to school, books in hand, dorm supplies packed, ready to study. And have sex .
At least that's the reputation of college -- the place to go not just for an advanced education, but also for a carnal education. To experience a lot of hooking up. Maybe a little experimentation before settling down after graduation. But are students really hitting the sheets as much as they are hitting the books? Apparently they are, according to a recent Sexual Satisfaction Survey conducted by Lifestyles Condoms .
After polling students aged 18-24 here's what they found about the amount-and they type-of sex taking place behind closed dorm doors:
Sex is the Norm. Since this was a sex survey, not one of the respondents said they had never had sex. One third (33%) said they hit the sheets several times per week, and 12% admitted being lucky enough to get busy multiple times per day. But not all students are that promiscuous-Almost 2 in 10 (18%) reported they do the deed from every few months to less than a few times per year.
Double Digit Partners. 86% of the respondents have had between 1 and 10 sexual partners, with 10% confessing to more than 15. The largest group? Between 2 and 4 partners, with 38%.
The Question of Condoms. While the majority of 18-24 year old respondents (44%) wear a condom most of the time they have sex, about 1 in 4 (23%) either only wear a condom some of the time they have sex, or worse, never wear a condom.
It's Not All Hookups. While 42% of those surveyed said they were in a casual relationship or a "friends with benefits" arrangement with one or more people, 44%, the largest group, said they were in a serious relationship. Fifteen percent are not in a relationship at all.
No Desire to Stray. Unless... Even with all the hooking up going on, 78% of the respondents said they have never cheated on their partner. But when asked if they would cheat knowing they would never get caught, 22% said they would.
Women on Top. The most popular sexual position among college students? Face to face with the woman on top, the favorite of 32% of those surveyed. Second place goes to the often maligned, and apparently underrated, missionary position with 28%, just barely beating out doggy style, in third place with 25%.
Does Size Matter? Bad news. It seems size does matter, with 83% of those responding saying it was very or somewhat important.
Talk Dirty to Me. The 18-24 year olds surveyed like their sex to be vocal. And dirty. 45% said they like dirty talk, and another 45% said yes, but it depended on their mood.
Watch Out for the Interns. When asked what they planned on doing in the future, one third said they wanted to have sex at work. 28% want that sex to be with a co-worker or boss. It must be an authority figure thing... 28% also said they want to have sex with a teacher.
Nice to Meet You, Let's Have Sex. One in four students surveyed (25%) said they want to have sex with a stranger, someone they have known less than 6 hours.
Keep it On the Down Low. Not everyone is out there bragging about sex. 65% said they talk about the details of their sex lives with friends only sometimes or rarely, and 15% said they never talk about it. Two in 10 (20%) said they give details to friends often or all the time.
Let's Go to the Videotape. They may not talk about their sex lives, but college students have no problem documenting it on video. While 41% said they would never make a sex tape, 54% said they would, or would be open to it. One in 20 college students (5%) admitted they are already breaking out the cam during sex.
Not All Experimenting Happens in the Lab. How adventurous do these students get? Four out of 10 (40%) describe themselves as open-minded and like experimenting with new things. 35% will occasionally try something new, while only 15% are not open to a little experimentation. And it looks like funded research is not the only innovation happening on campus... 11% consider themselves "innovators" saying they are always making up new things to do in bed.
Satisfaction Guaranteed. When asked how satisfied they were with their sex lives, about 6 in 10 (58%), said they were "very satisfied." Only 8% said they were not very satisfied or not satisfied at all.
Hmm... I'm thinking grad school might be in my near future.
All photos courtesy of Lifestyle Condoms.



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Tanya was a staff writer for Live Science from 2013 to 2015, covering a wide array of topics, ranging from neuroscience to robotics to strange/cute animals. She received a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a bachelor of science in biomedical engineering from Brown University. She has previously written for Science News, Wired, The Santa Cruz Sentinel, the radio show Big Picture Science and other places. Tanya has lived on a tropical island, witnessed volcanic eruptions and flown in zero gravity (without losing her lunch!). To find out what her latest project is, you can visit her website.



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NEW YORK — Contrary to popular belief, college students today aren't "hooking up" any more than in the past, a new study finds.
Recent studies and popular media have painted a picture of an increasingly prevalent hookup culture on college campuses. But researchers have now found today's college students do not have more frequent sex or more sexual partners than undergraduates in previous eras.
"We're questioning whether college students today live in a culture that features lots of no-strings-attached, casual sex , and the general perception that college students today have more liberal attitudes toward sexuality," said study researcher Martin Monto, a sociologist at the University of Portland. Monto presented the work here today (Aug. 13) at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association. [ The Sex Quiz: Myths, Taboos and Bizarre Facts ]
The study was based on a nationally representative sample from a survey of more than 1,800 people ages 18 to 25, who had graduated from high school and completed at least one year of college. The survey included questions, such as how many sexual partners a person had since age 18, how many sexual partners per year and how often they had sex. Monto and a colleague compared survey responses from 2002-2010 to those from 1988-1996.
They found that students nowadays don't have sex more often and don't have more partners than in the previous time period. Of the students from 2002-2010, 59.3 percent reported having sex at least once a week, compared with 65.2 percent of students from 1988-1996 (the drop in rate here was not significant from a statistical perspective).
And 31.6 percent of the modern group reported having more than one sexual partner in the past year, compared with 31.9 percent of the other group surveyed. For both groups, about 50 percent reported having more than two sexual partners since they turned 18.
So why the perception of a hookup culture on today's college campuses?
One possibility, Monto said, is that narratives about dating culture have changed. "The term 'hooking up' is widely used today and it wasn't as widely used in the past," Monto told LiveScience. The term "hooking up" is also ambiguous — it can be used to just mean making out, but these distinctions are sometimes lost in the media, he said.
Furthermore, college students today don't necessarily think of sexual partners as potential marriage partners, Monto said. Sexually active college students of today were more likely to report that one of their sexual partners in the past year was a casual date or pickup — and less likely to report having a spouse or regular sexual partner — compared with students in the previous era.
Attitudes toward other sexual norms have not changed much either. Today's students were no more accepting than their older peers of sexual activity between ages 14 and 16, extramarital sex or premarital sex. One differe
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