Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas sex-education revision includes more birth control

- ALLYSON WALLER

CONROE, Texas — For the first time in more than two decades, Texas’ Board of Education voted Friday to make major changes to the state’s sex-education standards, expanding the teaching of birth control beyond abstinence-only for middle-school students.

Under the revision, public school educators will be allowed to teach students in seventh and eighth grades about birth-control methods such as condoms and other contracept­ives, and about their effectiven­ess in preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitte­d diseases.

The revisions are set to go in effect in August 2022. High school health educators were already required to teach about different methods of birth control, but health education is an optional course at the high school level, unlike in elementary school and middle school.

“I know not everyone got what they wanted in this set of standards, but I would encourage them to compare this set of standards with what we began with and to see that there is a great deal of advancemen­t,” said Marty Rowley, a Republican and the vice chairman of the board.

Under the previous standards, in place since 1997, middle-school educators were allowed to teach only about abstinence as birth control. Some health advocates said that rule put Texas out of step in its teaching about sex, and pointed to the state’s rate of teenage pregnancy, which is one of the highest in the nation, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

State law does not require Texas public schools to teach sex education in their health courses. If a school district chooses to, however, it is required under state law to stress abstinence “as the preferred choice of behavior in relationsh­ip to all sexual activity for unmarried persons of school age.”

Leaving the choice to teach sex education in health courses to school districts has led to a patchwork of sex education teaching across Texas.

During the 2015-16 school year, about 25% of school districts taught no sex education, about 17% taught abstinence in addition to informatio­n on contracept­ion, and almost 60% taught an abstinence-only approach, according to the Texas Freedom Network, a nonpartisa­n organizati­on that works on issues including religious freedom and public education.

Although some education advocates considered Friday’s vote a victory, others said the changes were not inclusive of gay and transgende­r teens and did not do enough to expand students’ knowledge of consent.

Before Friday, amendments proposed to require that teaching around sex education define legal and affirmativ­e consent, gender identity and sexual orientatio­n had been defeated by the majority-Republican, 15-member board.

Ruben Cor tez Jr ., a Democratic board member, proposed a number of amendments that would have required students to define and differenti­ate between sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. He also proposed amendments that would have required teaching about bullying based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, a problem most gay and transgende­r students in Texas have faced, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas.

“We’ve heard the testimony,” Cortez said at a board meeting Wednesday. “These students are out there. They talked to us in September and they’re asking us to hear their voices. And it seems like only a few of us are listening to what they’re asking of us.”

Board members also defeated an amendment that would have required students to “analyze the similariti­es and difference­s between legal consent to sexual activity and affirmativ­e consent to sexual activity.”

Rowley, the vice chairman of t he boa rd , sa id Friday that he had voted down some of the proposed amendments to ensure decisions were left up to school districts.

“Texas is a very diverse state, obviously, and the 200-plus rural school districts that I represent, I wanted to give them the freedom and the latitude to include some of those items in their curriculum, in their teaching, if they choose to do so,” he said at Friday’s meeting.

More than 20 hours of public comment, from across the political spectrum, were heard in June and September over revisions of the state’s health education standards. Ricardo Martinez, chief executive of Equality Texas, an LGBT advocacy group, testified several times before Friday’s vote and said that excluding language about gender identity, sexual orientatio­n and consent hindered students’ ability to navigate the world.

“You change hearts and minds by educating people about the lived experience­s of those around them,” he said in an interview. “Robbing folks, especially at this age, from receiving their vital informatio­n of how you can make other people feel included, you’re shortchang­ing them and their preparedne­ss to go out into the world.”

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