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The Teenage Brain on Porn Is porn coloring a teenager's ideas of what sex should be like before they experience it?
Online porn, sexting should be included in sex ed . curriculum, Alberta professor says
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Does Alberta’s sex ed curriculum need to be updated?
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Alberta professor weighs in on what should be taught in sexual health education classes
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Should Alberta Education's Sex 'Ed Curriculum include topics like sexting and online pornography?
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By the age of 15 to 17, about one third of Canadian students have had sex .
Eighty-five per cent of grade 11 students have a cell phone .
For André Grace, the statistics speak to the need for sexual health education that is accurate, timely and relevant to kids and teens in 2016 . The director of research for the University of Alberta’s Institute for Sexual Minority Studies & Services suggests students are not getting that in their sexuality education classes offered in Alberta schools .
Alberta Education determines the curriculum for Health and Life Skills (K-9) and Career and Life Management (high school) . A spokesperson from the department says it is not intended to be specific, and individual teachers can determine which details they teach . Between that approach and the fact individual school boards potentially set their own priorities, Grace says sexual education is offered in a way that is piecemeal and inconsistent .
Global News recently sat down with Grace to discuss the topic .
Global News: What’s working in the way sexual education is taught and what isn’t?
Andre Grace : What is interesting is that, because education is a provincial and territorial responsibility in Canada, we see differences across the country .
There has been some comparative work . I think in Alberta we do have a significant amount of work to do to improve the sexual health curriculum . There isn’t consistency in delivery .
For example, we have a component on sexual health education in the Career and Life Management (CALM) course in grades 10 to 12 but I did interviews with students at Edmonton public schools and those students would describe what was going on in their CALM classes and I drew the conclusion that there’s very uneven delivery of sexual health education in those high schools and that deeply concerns me . So I started to look more closely .
There are 36 objects in the CALM course and only two of them focus on sexual health education . If, even with those two, there’s uneven delivery, then there are certainly students in our high schools that are getting very little in terms of sexual health education .
Watch below: Grace speaks about what needs to be talked about in Alberta classrooms
GN: Should online pornography be addressed?
AG: To me, it absolutely should be addressed . For example, one of the problems I have with my health outreach program is working with male youth who do not use condoms anymore . A lot of these youth are watching online pornography and condom use is out the window .
GN: What would you say to a parent who says, ‘I don’t want teachers talking about pornography to my kid?’
AG: I would say to them, ‘do you want your child to be healthy in the long term?’
I use the phrase that I want children and youth to be happy, healthy and hopeful and that means they need to be mentally healthy, sexually healthy and physically healthy . I think that parents are not often able, unless they are trained sexual educators themselves, to talk about sexual health in a complete and informative way, and they should not only rely on but demand that their schools do a total job delivering age-appropriate sexual health education .
To me, it’s a question of saying to a parent, ‘Do you want your child to be healthy? Do you want your child to be safe?’
“We have been engaging with our education partners and other organizations on how to ensure our sexual education program is comprehensive and that it is meeting the needs of students,” Eggen said in a statement to Global News .
“Sexual consent is the law, and our government’s expectation is that it be taught in schools . Our teachers play a valuable role in the safety and education of our young Albertans . They have the opportunity to work with parents and to access community resources to address student needs . We will ensure that sexual education is included in our plans for curriculum modernization and will be discussing this important matter with Albertans every step of the way .”
Watch below: Instruction video from 1966 on how parents should talk to their children about sex
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Porn addiction: 10% of 12-13 year olds worried about habits
Porn addiction: 10% of 12-13 year olds worried about habits Close
One in ten children between the ages of 12 and 13 are worried that they are "addicted" to watching pornography .
One in five members of the same age group think watching explicit content is normal, according to a study by children's charity NSPCC .
The charity has launched a campaign to give advice to young people about the potentially harmful effects of watching adult material .
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A young woman talks to Sima Kotecha about how her boyfriend's pornography habit led to him abusing her when she was 13
NSPCC's head of sexual abuse programmes, Jon Brown, says he is "not surprised" at the survey's findings
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By Patrick Howse Education reporter
A tenth of 12 to 13-year-olds fear they are "addicted" to pornography, an NSPCC ChildLine survey has concluded .
One in five of nearly 700 youngsters surveyed said they had seen pornographic images that had shocked or upset them, researchers found .
The charity also says that 12% of those surveyed said they had taken part in, or had made, a sexually explicit video .
It says that viewing porn is "a part of everyday life" for many of the children who contact its helpline .
ChildLine has launched a campaign to raise awareness and provide advice to young people about the harmful implications of an over exposure to porn following the survey results .
One boy under the age of 15 told ChildLine that he was "always watching porn, and some of it is quite aggressive" .
He said: "I didn't think it was affecting me at first but I've started to view girls a bit differently recently and it's making me worried .
"I would like to get married in the future but I'm scared it might never happen if I carry on thinking about girls the way I do ."
A girl, who is now 17, told the BBC that she was sexually assaulted by her boyfriend when they were both 12 years old .
"He thought it was OK on some level," she said .
"Pornography isn't just a 10-minute video - it has consequences ."
The ChildLine Fight Against Porn Zombies (FAPZ) campaign uses a series of animations looking at the implications of overexposure to porn for boys and girls .
The animations link to a range of information and advice to help young people understand the effects of replicating pornographic content in real life and to protect them from putting themselves at risk .
Peter Liver, director of ChildLine, said that it was important to talk openly about the issue .
"Children of all ages today have easy access to a wide range of pornography," he said . "If we as a society shy away from talking about this issue, we are failing the thousands of young people it is affecting .
"We know from the young people who contact ChildLine that viewing porn is a part of everyday life, and our poll shows that one in five 12 to 13-year-olds thinks that watching porn is normal behaviour .
"They tell ChildLine that watching porn is making them feel depressed, giving them body image issues, and making them feel pressured to engage in sexual acts they're not ready for ."
He welcomed the announcement last week of plans to teach children from the age of 11 about rape and sexual consent as part of personal, social and health education (PSHE) in schools .
"Our campaign clearly complements this proposal," he said .
"Across society, we need to remove the embarrassment and shame that exists around talking about porn - which is why we are launching this activity and helping young people to make more informed choices ."
Dame Esther Rantzen, ChildLine's founder, said it was shocking that children as young as 11 are approaching the helpline with concerns about pornography .
"Young people are turning to the internet to learn about sex and relationships," she said .
"We know they are frequently stumbling across porn, often unintentionally, and they are telling us very clearly that this is having a damaging and upsetting effect on them .
"Girls in particular have said they feel like they have to look and behave like porn stars to be liked by boys ."
Dame Esther said that improved education was vital .
"We absolutely have to talk to young people about sex, love, respect and consent as soon as we feel they are ready, to ensure that they gain a proper perspective between real-life relationships and the fantasy world of porn," she said .
F .A .P .Z - Fight Against Porn Zombies Online and mobile safety Explore ChildLine
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Magazine | What Teenagers Are Learning From Online Porn
What Teenagers Are Learning From Online Porn
American adolescents watch much more pornography than their parents know — and it’s shaping their ideas about pleasure, power and intimacy . Can they be taught to see it more critically?
Credit . . . Photo illustration by Sara Cwynar
D rew was 8 years old when he was flipping through TV channels at home and landed on “Girls Gone Wild .” A few years later, he came across HBO’s late-night soft-core pornography . Then in ninth grade, he found online porn sites on his phone . The videos were good for getting off, he said, but also sources for ideas for future sex positions with future girlfriends . From porn, he learned that guys need to be buff and dominant in bed, doing things like flipping girls over on their stomach during sex . Girls moan a lot and are turned on by pretty much everything a confident guy does . One particular porn scene stuck with him: A woman was bored by a man who approached sex gently but became ecstatic with a far more aggressive guy .
But around 10th grade, it began bothering Drew, an honor-roll student who loves baseball and writing rap lyrics and still confides in his mom, that porn influenced how he thought about girls at school . Were their breasts, he wondered, like the ones in porn? Would girls look at him the way women do in porn when they had sex? Would they give him blow jobs and do the other stuff he saw?
Drew, who asked me to use one of his nicknames, was a junior when I first met him in late 2016, and he told me some of this one Thursday afternoon, as we sat in a small conference room with several other high school boys, eating chips and drinking soda and waiting for an after-school program to begin . Next to Drew was Q ., who asked me to identify him by the first initial of his nickname . He was 15, a good student and a baseball fan, too, and pretty perplexed about how porn translated into real life . Q . hadn’t had sex — he liked older, out-of-reach girls, and the last time he had a girlfriend was in sixth grade, and they just fooled around a bit . So he wasn’t exactly in a good position to ask girls directly what they liked . But as he told me over several conversations, it wasn’t just porn but rough images on Snapchat, Facebook and other social media that confused him . Like the GIF he saw of a man pushing a woman against a wall with a girl commenting: “I want a guy like this .” And the one Drew mentioned of the “pain room” in “Fifty Shades of Grey” with a caption by a girl: “This is awesome!”
Watching porn also heightened Q .’s performance anxiety . “You are looking at an adult,” he told me . “The guys are built and dominant and have a big penis, and they last a long time .” And if you don’t do it like the guys in porn, Drew added, “you fear she’s not going to like you .”
Leaning back in his chair, Drew said some girls acted as if they wanted some thug rather than a smart, sensitive guy . But was it true desire? Was it posturing? Was it what girls thought they were supposed to want? Neither Q . nor Drew knew . A couple of seats away, a sophomore who had been quiet until then added that maybe the girls didn’t know either . “I think social media makes girls think they want something,” he said, noting he hadn’t seen porn more than a handful of times and disliked it . “But I think some of the girls are afraid .”
“It gets in your head,” Q . said . “If this girl wants it, then maybe the majority of girls want it .” He’d heard about the importance of consent in sex, but it felt pretty abstract, and it didn’t seem as if it would always be realistic in the heat of the moment . Out of nowhere was he supposed to say: Can I pull your hair? Or could he try something and see how a girl responded? He knew that there were certain things — “big things, like sex toys or anal” — that he would not try without asking .
“I would just do it,” said another boy, in jeans and a sweatshirt . When I asked what he meant, he said anal sex . He assumed that girls like it, because the women in porn do .
“I would never do something that looked uncomfortable,” Drew said, jumping back into the conversation . “I might say, ‘I’ve seen this in porn — do you want to try it?’ ”
It was almost 4 p .m ., and the boys started to gather their backpacks to head to a class known as Porn Literacy . The course, with the official title The Truth About Pornography: A Pornography-Literacy Curriculum for High School Students Designed to Reduce Sexual and Dating Violence, is a recent addition to Start Strong, a peer-leadership program for teenagers headquartered in Boston’s South End and funded by the city’s public-health agency . About two dozen selected high school students attend every year, most of them black or Latino, along with a few Asian students, from Boston public high schools, including the city’s competitive exam schools, and a couple of parochial schools . During most of the year, the teenagers learn about healthy relationships, dating violence and L .G .B .T . issues, often through group discussions, role-playing and other exercises .
But for around two hours each week, for five weeks, the students — sophomores, juniors and seniors — take part in Porn Literacy, which aims to make them savvier, more critical consumers of porn by examining how gender, sexuality, aggression, consent, race, queer sex, relationships and body images are portrayed (or, in the case of consent, not portrayed) in porn .
On average, boys are around 13, and girls are around 14, when they first see pornography, says Bryant Paul, an associate professor at Indiana University’s Media School and the author of studies on porn content and adolescent and adult viewing habits . In a 2008 University of New Hampshire survey , 93 percent of male college students and 62 percent of female students said they saw online porn before they were 18 . Many females, in particular, weren’t seeking it out . Thirty-five percent of males said they had watched it 10 or more times during adolescence .
Porn Literacy, which began in 2016 and is the focus of a pilot study, was created in part by Emily Rothman, an associate professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health who has conducted several studies on dating violence, as well as on porn use by adolescents . She told me that the curriculum isn’t designed to scare kids into believing porn is addictive, or that it will ruin their lives and relationships and warp their libidos . Instead it is grounded in the reality that most adolescents do see porn and takes the approach that teaching them to analyze its messages is far more effective than simply wishing our children could live in a porn-free world .
Imagine that you are a 14-year-old today . A friend might show you a short porn clip on his phone during the bus ride to school or after soccer practice . A pornographic GIF appears on Snapchat . Or you mistype the word “fishing” and end up with a bunch of links to “fisting” videos . Like most 14-year-olds, you haven’t had sex, but you’re curious, so maybe you start searching and land on one of the many porn sites that work much like YouTube — XVideos .com, Xnxx .com, BongaCams .com, all of them among the 100 most-frequented websites in the world, according to Alexa Top Sites . Or you find Pornhub, the most popular of the group, with 80 million visitors a day and more traffic than Pinterest, Tumblr or PayPal . The mainstream websites aren’t verifying your age, and your phone allows you to watch porn away from the scrutinizing eyes of adults . If you still have parental-control filters, you probably have ways around them .
Besides, there’s a decent chance your parents don’t think you are watching porn . Preliminary analysis of data from a 2016 Indiana University survey of more than 600 pairs of children and their parents reveals a parental naïveté gap: Half as many parents thought their 14- and 18-year-olds had seen porn as had in fact watched it . And depending on the sex act, parents underestimated what their kids saw by as much as 10 times .
What teenagers see on Pornhub depends partly on algorithms and the clips they’ve clicked on in the past . Along with stacks of videos on the opening page, there are several dozen categories (“teen,” “anal,” “blonde,” “girl on girl,” “ebony,” “milf”) that can take them to more than six million videos . The clips tend to be short, low on production value, free and, though Pornhub tries to prevent it, sometimes pirated from paid sites . Many of the heterosexual videos are shot from the male point of view, as if the man were holding the camera while he has sex with a woman whose main job, via oral sex, intercourse or anal sex, is to make him orgasm . Plot lines are thin to nonexistent as the camera zooms in for up-close shots of genitals and penetration that are repetitive, pounding and — though perhaps not through the eyes of a 14-year-old — banal . (There are alternative narratives in L .G .B .T . and feminist porn, and studies show that for gay and bisexual youth, porn can provide affirmation that they are not alone in their sexual desires .)
We don’t have many specifics on what kids actually view, in large part because it’s extremely difficult to get federal funding for research on children and pornography . A few years ago, frustrated by the dearth of large, recent United States studies, Rashida Jones, Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus, creators of the 2017 Netflix documentary series “Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On,” about technology and porn, paired with several foundations and philanthropists to fund a national survey about porn viewing, sexual attitudes and behaviors . As part of the survey, led by Debby Herbenick, a professor at the Indiana University School of Public Health and director of the university’s Center for Sexual Health Promotion, along with her colleague Bryant Paul, 614 teenagers ages 14 to 18 reported what their experiences were with porn . In preliminary data analysis from the study (Herbenick is submitting an academic paper for publication this year), of the roughly 300 who did watch porn, one-quarter of the girls and 36 percent of the boys said they had seen videos of men ejaculating on women’s faces (known as “facials”), Paul says . Almost one-third of both sexes saw B .D .S .M . (bondage, domination, sadism, masochism), and 26 percent of males and 20 percent of females watched videos with double penetration, described in the study as one or more penises or objects in a woman’s anus and/or in her vagina . Also, 31 percent of boys said they had seen “gang bangs,” or group sex, and “rough oral sex” (a man aggressively thrusting his penis in and out of a mouth); less than half as many girls had .
It’s hard to know if, and how, this translates into behavior . While some studies show a small number of teens who watch higher rates of porn engage in earlier sex as well as gender stereotyping and sexual relationships that are less affectionate than their peers, these only indicate correlations, not cause and effect . But surveys do suggest that the kinds of sex some teenagers have may be shifting . The percentage of 18-to-24-year-old women who reported trying anal sex rose to 40 percent in 2009 from 16 percent in 1992, according to the largest survey on American sexual behavior in decades, co-authored by Herbenick and published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine . In data from that same survey, 20 percent of 18-to-19 year old females had tried anal sex; about 6 percent of 14-to-17-year-old females had . And in a 2016 Swedish study of nearly 400 16-year-old girls, the percentage of girls who had tried anal sex doubled if they watched pornography . Like other studies about sex and porn, it only showed a correlation, and girls who are more sexually curious may also be drawn to porn . In addition, some girls may view anal sex as a “safer” alternative to vaginal sex, as there’s little risk of pregnancy .
The Indiana University national survey of teenagers asked about other sex behaviors as well . Though the data have not been fully analyzed, preliminary findings suggest that of the teenagers who had had sex, around one-sixth of boys said they had ejaculated on someone’s face or choked a sex partner . The survey didn’t define choking, but the high school and college-age students I spoke to referred to it as anything from placing a hand gently on a partner’s neck to squeezing it .
We don’t have longitudinal data on the frequency of ejaculating on a girl’s face or choking among American teenagers to know whether either practice is more common now . And, as David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, told me, fewer teenagers have early sex than in the past (in a recent study, 24 percent of American ninth graders had sex; in 1995 about 37 percent had), and arrests of teenagers for sexual assault are also down . But you don’t have to believe that porn leads to sexual assault or that it’s creating a generation of brutal men to wonder how it helps shape how teenagers talk and think about sex and, by extension, their ideas about masculinity, femininity, intimacy and power .
Over the year in which I spoke to dozens of older teenagers at Start Strong and around the country, many said that both porn and mainstream media — everything from the TV show “Family Guy” (which references choking and anal sex) to Nicki Minaj’s song “Truffle Butter” (with an apparent allusion to anal sex followed by vaginal sex) to the lyrics in Rihanna’s “S&M” (“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but chains and whips excite me”) — made anal and rough sex seem almost commonplace . Drew told me he got the sense that girls wanted to be dominated not only from reading a few pages of “Fifty Shades of Grey” but also from watching the movie “Mr . & Mrs . Smith,” with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie . “She’s on the table, and she’s getting pounded by him . That’s all I’ve seen growing up .”
These images confound many teenagers about the kinds of sex they want or
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