It was the summer after my 8th grade year when I had my first kiss. I would like to tell you that it was that way for all the kids in my school, but it wasn't. Kids were making out or more under some stairs at the grade school in 5th and 6th grades. It got to be such a big problem that they had a teacher watch the stairs. By junior high kids were having sex.
My junior year of high school I was on the school newspaper, and we wanted to do an issue that talked about teen sex. How many were doing it, at what age, and the ones that weren't what made them decide to wait. It would also have information on abstinence, safe sex, and an article on a week in the life of a teenage parent. We got the ok from our teacher and the principal. We spent a month working on this issue of the paper. We did surveys, interviewed students, the school nurse, and a doctor. What we found out was that the kids who felt like they could talk to their parents openly about sex were more likely to be older when they had sex if they had had it at all in high school. We had the paper ready for the printer when members of the school board came into the class and said that we could not publish the paper. The paper was due out the next day and they decided at the very last minute that we could not have a paper talking about sex. They felt that too many parents would be upset that their kids could buy this paper ($.25) and read about sex. So we printed a paper that had the title "THIS IS WHAT THE SCHOOL BOARD WOULD LIKE FOR YOU TO KNOW ABOUT SEX" and the rest of the paper was blank. All 8 pages were blank! It caused a big uproar in the school. In the end our "sex paper" was never published but the teacher that taught the sex ed class used all of our information in her class. She told us that it helped her know what she really needed to talk about in her class.