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THE BLOODY STIGMA IS STILL HERE, PERIOD.Boiko, Olha, Carrez, Lien January 2022 (has links)
iAbstractThis exploratory study aims to investigate the connection between menstrual perceptions,knowledge and education about menstruation as well as the period product choice. Using thefeminist approach, research data were gathered from three focus groups of girls between 14 and15 years old that went to the same high school in Visby (Sweden). Thematic analysis was usedto analyse the data. The findings show that the stigma surrounding menstruation affects girls’everyday lives, forcing them to hide and control their periods and emotions. This results inconstant stress in school. Menstrual concealment also has an impact on period products girlschoose. Participants were lacking knowledge regarding period products and showed nointention to use sustainable period products. Thus, menstrual knowledge is important to reducenegative perceptions and attitudes toward menstruation and period products as well as thefeeling of shame about women’s reproductive functions. Girls gain this knowledge by talkingto other females, especially moms, but also via the Internet and social media. In school, sexeducation starts too late and does not cover emotions, menstrual pain, the different periodproducts, how the menstrual cycle affects girls’ lives and the fact that menstruation is differentfor every girl.
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State Adolescent Reproductive Health Policies and their Impact on Teen Pregnancy OutcomesTosh, Jenna 01 January 2015 (has links)
Using multiple regression analysis, this study analyzes the impact of state-level adolescent reproductive health statutes on rates of teenage pregnancy, birth and abortion rates. This study also analyzes the impact that adolescent reproductive health policy outputs have had on teenage pregnancy outcomes between 1992 and 2008, and the disparate impact of policies on minority teens. While some preventive adolescent reproductive health policies are found to impact teen pregnancy outcomes, most research findings pertain to the impact of abortion policy. Restrictions on minors' access to confidential prenatal care are associated with reduced rates of teen abortion while restricting access to contraceptive services is associated with increases in teen abortion. Surprisingly, states with more family planning program spending are found to have been less effective in reducing rates of teen pregnancy and births between 1992 and 2008. Abortion restrictions are found to decrease rates of teen abortion and increase rates of teen birth. Mandated parental involvement in minors' abortions is found to increase rates of teen birth and contributed to a slower rate of decline in teen abortion between 1992 and 2008. This study indicates disparate impact of both preventive adolescent reproductive health policies and restrictive abortion policies. Restrictive abortion statutes were found to have an exceptionally strong positive effect on rates of Black teen birth, with a moderate impact on Hispanic teen birth and no impact on White teen birth.
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Sex Education or Self Education? LGBT+ Experiences with Exclusionary CurriculaReeves, Karli 01 January 2019 (has links)
Though much research exists on LGBT+ exclusion from school-based sexual and reproductive health (SRH) education, the strategies used by LGBT+ individuals during their search for knowledge regarding the subject are not as widely documented. Using the ethnographic research method of semi-structured interviews, this research explores the experiences of young LGBT+ adults with formal sexual and reproductive health education and examines the self-education methods employed by this population in the context of exclusionary and cisheteronormative curricula. This project also functions to contribute to existing literature in the field of anthropology and other social sciences regarding the subject of SRH education, particularly LGBT+ SRH education. Furthermore, this study supports the need for additional research through the use of applied anthropology concerning interactions between institutions, policy and individual experiences of health.
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Sexualundervisning eller befolkningskontroll? : En kvalitativ textanalys av Elise Ottesen-Jensen och Elin Cederbloms texter om sex och samlevnad mellan åren 1909-1928 / Sex education or population planning? : A qualitative text analysis of Elise Ottesen-Jensen and Elin Cederblom's texts on sex and relations between the years 1909-1928Lindqvist, Rebecka January 2021 (has links)
This thesis discusses authors Elise Ottesen-Jensen and Elin Cederblom’s texts on sex education in the early 20th century. The purpose of this thesis is to examine how sexuality, women, men and gender are portrayed in the texts and books. The study aims to explore whether the authors texts vary depending on their ideological affiliation which is made visible through intersectional theory. Ottesen-Jensen writes from a working class and socialist perspective whilst Cederblom provides a conservative perspective on the subject. Through a qualitative text analysis, the study examines and compares how sexuality is portrayed and treated in the texts and how the discussion regarding sex education in relation to men, women and gender develops. To give the discussion a greater depth, the method also has a large focus on the authors context and the context of the time where the study takes place which makes connections and patterns more visible. The conclusion of this thesis is that the authors provide different views on sex education. Ottesen-Jensen is significantly more progressive in her advice and opinions than Cederblom who has a conservative approach. Both authors have a clear view of what tasks a woman should be engaged in and what a man should do. While the man is seen as a figure of the public and working life, the woman has great responsibility at home in the reproduction, upbringing of children and everything else related to it. The source material matches the context of the time and its accepted views. Regardless of the authors' ideological affiliation both Cederblom and Ottesen-Jensen’s material discusses sex education in relation to thoughts and opinions about eugenics and population planning. What is most characteristic of the study's conclusion is the material's mixture of conservative and progressive opinions. Progressive opinions that are still relevant today such as views on abortion and prostitution.
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Understanding student engagement: Insights from an all-girls urban neighborhood public high schoolCurci, Juliet DiLeo January 2011 (has links)
Students in a large mid-Atlantic city graduate from the public district high schools at an average annual rate of fifty-six percent. This low rate of high school completion predicts future financial and social instability for not only those individuals who drop out of school, but also for their surrounding community. The research on dropouts highlights the significance that students' low levels of academic and social engagement in school have on their decisions to leave school. Advocates for single-sex education argue that students engage and achieve at high levels when learning in this educational model. According to the current literature, students' success in single-sex schools is primarily a result of the proacademic choice that they and their guardians make when electing to attend a single-sex school. Through focus groups, interviews, and observations, this study explores what student engagement looks like at an all-girls urban neighborhood public high school that is non-selective and where the proacademic choice of students is not a factor. With new federal policy measures advocating innovation in public education, single-sex schools - historically inaccessible to minority students from low-income communities - are finding a foothold in urban public school systems across the country. This study aims to illuminate the extent to which a single-sex school serves as a "site of transformation" for young women of color from a low-income neighborhood. The realization of the school's mission, to interrupt the social reproduction of the neighborhood through the education of its young women, depends on its students' graduation from high school and their access to and success through college. Data related to various features of the school are analyzed to highlight how student engagement is promoted and inhibited at the school and ultimately results in transformative and/or reproductive educational experiences for students. / Urban Education
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Perceptions of students regarding the delivery of sexual and reproductive health education in schools in FijiRam, S., Mohammadnezhad, Masoud 01 March 2023 (has links)
Yes / Adolescent sexual and reproductive health (SRH) remains a challenge globally. High school youths without comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) are more likely to engage in high risk sexual behaviors than their peers in schools with CSE. Fiji continues to have very poor adolescents SRH indicators. This study aimed to gauge the perceptions of students towards the delivery of SRH education in schools in Fiji. A qualitative study design was used to collect data from students in year 11-13 in public secondary schools in Suva, Fiji in 2018. Schools with equal ethnic mix were selected. A semi-structured open-ended questionnaire was used to guide Focus Group Discussions (FGDs). A male research facilitator conducted FGD with males while a female research facilitator facilitated that amongst the females. Data collected was analyzed thematically. Seven FGDs were conducted. A total of 46 students (29 males) participated with the age range from 17-19 years old. Eight themes emerged: current SRH education; students' knowledge on adverse consequences of SRH; sources of SRH information; need for sex education; provision of SRH education in schools; characteristics of teachers of SRH education; age-appropriate incremental sex education; and ideal version of SRH. The study shows that Fijian students desired a lot more from sex education than what is currently offered for sexual decision-making. There is a need for mandatory and comprehensive sex education for young people.
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Reconceptualizing bodies and pleasure: considerations by and for sex-positive service workersHenderson, Charlotte 27 April 2016 (has links)
Human sexuality has been overrun with narratives that limit the possibilities of pleasure. Sex-positive workers have the potential to challenge the ways in which these limitations become embodied. In this research I explore narratives of sex education and youth, pleasure as prevention, and the medicalization of sexuality. I engage in collective biography as a way to identify how these narratives shape the way bodies and pleasure get taken up in specific places. Drawing from poststructural feminist theory I propose three ways of reconceptualizing bodies and pleasure as emergent sites of change and potential. Through an analysis of the experiences of sex-positive service workers in Canada, I consider what else, and for whom, bodies, pleasure, and sex education might look like. / Graduate / 0680 0733 0573 / yorkchender@gmail.com
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Sexuality and intellectual disability: Perspectives of young women with intellectual disabilityBleazard, Adele Venitia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD (Educational Psychology))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study focuses on the intersection of disability and gender: being intellectually disabled
and being a young woman. It specifically, explores the lives of intellectually disabled young
women and sexuality.
This study attempts to explore the contributions that intellectually disabled young women can
make to the understanding of the sexuality needs and concerns of young women with
intellectual disability. It is an attempt to make public their needs and concerns regarding
sexuality issues as they have been recognised to be the ultimate lost voices in disability
research, and have historically been excluded in the production of sexuality knowledge.
A mixed method approach is used, where the data for the research was produced during
interviews with 21 participants between the ages of 18 and 23. A focus group discussion was
also held. All the women were either current learners or past learners at a school for
“mentally handicapped learners”. Ten mothers were interviewed with regard to their views on
sexuality and their intellectually disabled daughters. A questionnaire was given to 12
teachers to complete as well. Involving mothers and teachers is an attempt to establish the
dominant views of the significant persons and professionals in the lives of these young
women, including those who are directly and indirectly responsible for their sexuality
education.
In interviews and the focus group, study participants discussed the various social messages
they receive, as intellectually disabled persons, with regard to domains of sexuality:
friendship, dating, and marriage. The participants gave insight into the levels of their
knowledge with regards to sex and sexuality education, menstruation, contraception,
pregnancy and childbirth, and sexually transmitted infections.
The young women shared their predominantly negative experiences of being stereotyped,
with some participants expressing their resentment. Their low levels of social, biological, and
physiological sexuality knowledge make appropriate sexuality education a priority. The study
concludes with recommendations regarding the type of sexuality education the young
women propose and suggested responses for special schools. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie focus op die kruispad van gestremdheid en geslag: om intellektueel gestremd
en om ‘n jong vrou te wees. Dit ondersoek spesifiek die lewens van intellektuele gestremde
jong vroue en seksualitiet.
Hierdie studie poog om die bydraes te verken wat intellektueel gestremde jong vrouens kan
maak om die seksualiteitsbehoeftes en bekommernisse van jong vrouens met intellektuele
gestremdheid te verstaan. Dit is ‘n poging om hulle behoeftes en bekommernisse oor
seksualitiet hoorbaar te maak omdat dit as die opperste verlore stem in navorsing oor
gestremdheid uitgewys is, en hulle histrories van die generering van kennis oor seksualitiet
uitgesluit is.
Die benadering is ‘n gemengde metode waartydens data vir die navorsing gedurende
onderhoude met 21 deelnemers tussen die ouderdomme van 18 en 23 jaar gegenereer is. ‘n
Fokusgreopbespreking is ook gehou. Al die vroue is òf huidige òf vorige leerders van ‘n
skool vir “versatndelike gestremde leerders”. Onderhode is met tien moeders gevoer ten
opsigste van hulle beskouings oor seksualitiet en hulle verstandelik gestremde dogters. ‘n
Vraelys is ook vir 12 onderwysers gegee om te voltooi. Die moeders en onderwysers is
betrek in ‘n poging om die heersende beskouings van die betekenisvolle persone en
professionele mense in die lewens van hierdie jong vrouens te bepaal, insluitend diegene vat
direk en indirek vir hulle seksualiteitsopvoeding verantwoordelik is.
Tydens die onderhoude en fokusgroepbespreking het die deelnemers aan die studie die
onderskeie social boodskappe wat hulle as verstandelik gestremde persone kry, bespreek
met verwysing na die domeine van seksualitiet: vriendskap, uitgaan en die huwelik. Die
deelnemers het lig gewerp op hulle vlakke van kennis oor seks en seksualiteitsonderrig,
mesntuasie, voorbehoeding, swangerskap en kindergeboorte, en seksueel oordraagbare
infeksies.
Die jong vroue het hul oorwegend negatiewe ervarings van stereotipering gedeel, en
sommige deelnemers het hulle afkeer uitgespreek. Hulle lae vlakke van sosiale, biologiese
en fisiologiese kennis van seksualiteit maak toepaslike seksualiteitsvoorligting ‘n prioriteit.
Die studie sluit af met aanbevelings oor die tipe seksualiteitsopvoeding wat die jong vroue
voorstel en stel wyses voor waarop spesiale skole kan reageer.
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An Investigation of Certain Factors Related to Self-Concept, Sexual Knowledge, and Attitude toward Sex Education of a Group of Elementary TeachersHobbs, George W. (George William), 1932- 06 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to determine the relationship between self-concept, expressed sexual knowledge, and attitude toward sex education of a group of experienced elementary teachers. A second dimension of the problem was to investigate the relationship of the three variables above with certain other factors that could possibly influence the effectiveness of the elementary teacher of sex education. These factors were age of the teacher, sex of the teacher ,grade level of teaching, educational level of the teacher, teaching experience, marital status of the teacher, number of siblings of the teacher, and church preference or affiliation of the teacher.
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An Exploration of the Influence of Race and Gender on Sexual Beliefs and Attitudes of AdolescentsVandenberg, Kristine Marie 01 January 2007 (has links)
This study explores factors that influence the sexual attitudes and behaviors of adolescents specifically through an examination of social constructs that measure sexual beliefs and attitudes of adolescents and the relationships between race and gender and sexual beliefs and attitudes. As the U.S. has maintained one of the highest rates of unplanned teen pregnancy and births among industrialized nations, schools and community groups have struggled to combat teen pregnancy and worked toward designing effective prevention programs. Through an emphasis either on abstinence or safe sex practices, these programs strive to influence adolescents' sexual behavior. However, studies and reports reveal a paucity of research that examines adolescents' attitudes and beliefs of sexual behavior, especially for cultural- and gender- specific groups of adolescents. Drawing from social constructionist theory and multiracial and radical feminist theoretical frameworks, this study utilizes Virginia Abstinence Education Initiative (VAEI) data from surveys administered to adolescents measuring sexual attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors. This study examines race and gender differences among the participants with regard to beliefs and attitudes about sexual behavior. The goal is to both better understand race and gender influences on adolescents' sexual beliefs and attitudes and to provide information to those who are in the position to develop more successful and effective teen pregnancy prevention programs. Consistent with existing literature, findings indicate gender-based differences regarding sexual beliefs and attitudes and minimal race-based differences in this analysis. An intersectional analysis further suggests that although female adolescents across race held similar beliefs and attitudes regarding sexuality, there were differences across race among male adolescents.
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