Training young ones about sex is without concern a little awks. But growing ethical panic, pervasive pornography and increased knowledge of intimate punishment have really turned it directly into a minefield that is veritable.
Issues and commentary built-up from Victorian schoolchildren by experts through the Sexuality Educators’ Collective. Credit: Josh Robenstone
It is before dinner in only a little seminar area through the Hampton Community Centre, in Melbourne’s suburban south. A dozen women, sitting around a square dining are chatting, rapid-fire, about sexual intercourse. There are numerous “p” terms: pornography, pleasure, penis. But this is nothing at all unusual. These females constantly mention sex. They are generally educators that are intercourse professionals in explaining intercourse and relationships to kids and adolescents, used by state schools, fancy individual schools and conservative Catholic schools.