In Texas, a stand to teach 'abstinence only' in
sex ed
By Stacy A. Teicher
Presidential politics
isn't the only realm where the Texas way prevails. As a heavyweight in the $4.3 billion
textbook market, the state puts its stamp on materials bound for many of the nation's
classrooms.
On Friday, two messages
came through loud and clear as the State Board of Education voted on a new list of
approved health books: That abstinence should be taught without any textbook discussion of
contraception. And that the books should be explicit about marriage as a union between a
man and a woman.
Texas is one of 21 states with a
centralized process to review textbooks, but it's the second-biggest market. "If
[interest] groups can be successful in California and Texas in getting some restrictions
as to what content is covered, that will have a major influence on textbooks that are sold
nationally," says Martha McCarthy, chancellor's professor of education at Indiana University
in Bloomington.
Everything from evolution
to multiculturalism has come up for scrutiny in textbook debates over the past century.
But the origin of the state-approval process dates even further back to just after the
Civil War. Southern states organized to keep out textbooks that they saw as disparaging
the Confederacy, so Northern publishers began sending separate books with more palatable
references, like "the War for Southern Independence," according to a September
report on textbooks by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute in Washington.
The report criticizes
states that dictate what books schools can purchase, saying the practice "entices
extremist groups to hijack the curriculum, and papers the land with mediocre instructional
materials." Textbook publishing is ripe for reform, it argues, because students spend
somewhere between 50 percent and 90 percent of class and homework time focused on
textbooks.
In hearings before
Friday's vote in Texas, the debate centered on the discussion of abstinence and sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs) in four high school books. Protect Our Kids, a coalition of
educators, health experts, parents, and religious leaders, raised concerns that three of
the books don't talk about condoms or other contraceptives at all, while one mentions
latex condoms briefly.
Instead, all the books
teach that abstinence is the only 100 percent effective way to prevent pregnancy or STDs.
One offers strategies such as going out in groups, avoiding alcohol and drugs, and getting
plenty of rest to avoid having "to make a tough choice when you are tired."
"We agree that teens
should remain abstinent," says Dan Quinn, communications director for the Texas
Freedom Network, a watchdog group and part of the coalition. "But [we want] basic,
medically accurate information [for] students as they go forward in life."
The state curriculum
standards require students to be able to "analyze the effectiveness and
ineffectiveness of barrier protection and other contraceptive methods," and Mr. Quinn
wonders how students can do that when their books don't mention use the word
"condom." "This is high school health class - for many of these kids it's
the last opportunity to get this kind of lifesaving information," he says.
"What they're saying
is we want a double standard taught - which confuses children," counters Cathie
Adams, president of the Texas Eagle Forum and a supporter of the abstinence-only approach
in the textbooks.
Publishers will provide
information on contraceptives in free supplemental materials - to give local school boards
flexibility about whether to include those lessons in their curricula. Charts about the
effectiveness of various methods for preventing pregnancy and STDs are also included in
the teachers' editions of the books.
"There's a united
effort in the local school districts [to] know what the social mores are at the local
level, so we're happy for [teachers] to be able to introduce what they know to be in line
with what parents and administration agree to," Mrs. Adams says.
But some observers in Texas
and beyond are concerned that the supplemental information won't make its way into the
hands of most teens who need it.
An editorial in the Austin
American-Statesman this summer pointed out that 15- to 17-year-old girls in Texas have the
nation's highest pregnancy rate, and it urged schools not to buy the new textbooks. The
decade-old books currently used in Austin high schools encourage abstinence, but also talk
about condoms as a way to prevent the spread of STDs.
Some board members did
request changes to middle school and high school books before approving them on Friday -
but not the ones that Quinn had been hoping for. Publishers agreed to replace some
gender-neutral references with words such as "husbands and wives," to satisfy
concerns that students would get a subtle message approving of same-sex unions. Texas law
does not allow gay marriage or recognize civil unions.
|