2003
DOI: 10.1080/03054980307431
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Sex Education Materials in The Netherlands and in England and Wales: A comparison of content, use and teaching practice

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Cited by 25 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(9 reference statements)
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“…We have shown how in utilising insights from play and social gaming, and through taking an extended, multi-layered process of user centred design, we were able to produce work that distanced itself from HCI's more traditional, restrictive and problematic discourses around sex and sexuality [19]. Our approach took a 'permissive' approach [14], prioritised young people's perspectives, and respected their sexual agency, regularly lacking from 'interventions' in this area [21], particularly when sexuality is considered in conjunction with technology [29]. Young people's sexuality is a contentious topic, dominated by adult opinion, with conflicting views over how the topic should be approached.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We have shown how in utilising insights from play and social gaming, and through taking an extended, multi-layered process of user centred design, we were able to produce work that distanced itself from HCI's more traditional, restrictive and problematic discourses around sex and sexuality [19]. Our approach took a 'permissive' approach [14], prioritised young people's perspectives, and respected their sexual agency, regularly lacking from 'interventions' in this area [21], particularly when sexuality is considered in conjunction with technology [29]. Young people's sexuality is a contentious topic, dominated by adult opinion, with conflicting views over how the topic should be approached.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead she argues there is very clear evidence that sexual behavior varies hugely from person to person. In contrast to being an inbuilt biological urge, cross cultural studies have shown us that sex is fundamentally shaped by the social context [21].…”
Section: Sex Is Not a Natural Actmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While sex education is predominantly about the reproductive body, it rarely focuses on bodily sensations and experiences, and the body is often presented as desexualised and divorced from sensuality. For example, British textbooks rarely use photographs of naked men or women and genitalia are represented in medical-style diagrams giving cross sections of the body (Lewis and Knijn, 2003). They seldom mention female sexual arousal or pleasure (Lewis and Knijn, 2003), and identification and explanation of the clitoris is often missing from diagrams of sexual organs (Reiss, 1998;Diorio and Munro, 2000).…”
Section: Embodied Pedagogymentioning
confidence: 99%