Each of these should be learned before completing second grade. Average age range is fourteen through sixteen.
Consent & Healthy Relationships
- Core Concepts
- Compare and contrast characteristics of healthy and unhealthy romantic and/or sexual relationships
- Describe what constitutes sexual consent, its importance, and legal consequences of sexual behavior without consent
- Explain the impact media, including sexually explicit media, can have on one’s perceptions of and expectations for a healthy relationship
- Analyzing Influences
- Evaluate strategies to end an unhealthy relationship, including when situations may require an adult and/or professional support
- Analyze the potentially positive and negative roles of technology and social media on one’s sense of self and within relationships
- Analyze factors that can affect the ability to give and receive consent
- Interpersonal Communication
- Describe effective ways to communicate consent, personal boundaries, and desires as they relate to intimacy, pleasure, and sexual behavior
- Decision Making
- Evaluate a variety of characteristics of romantic and’or sexual relationships and determine which ones are personally most important
- Goal Setting
- Develop a plan to get out of an unsafe or unhealthy relationship
- Self-Management
- Demonstrate ways to show respect for the boundaries of others as they relate to intimacy and sexual behavior
Anatomy & Physiology
- Core Concepts
- Explain the human reproductive and sexual response systems, including differentiating between internal and external body parts and their functions and that there are natural occurring variations in human bodies
Puberty & Adolescent Sexual Development
- Core Concepts
- Describe the cognitive, social, and emotional changes of adolescence and early adulthood
- Analyzing Influences
- Analyze how peers, family, media, society, culture, and a person’s intersecting identities can influence self-concept, body image, and self-esteem
Gender Identity & Expression
- Core Concepts
- Differentiate between sex assigned at birth, gender identity, and gender expression
- Analyzing Influences
- Analyze how media, society, culture, and one’s intersecting identities can influence attitudes, beliefs, and expectations about gender, gender identity, gender roles, and gender expression
Sexual Orientation & Identity
- Core Concepts
- Differentiate between sexual orientation, sexual behavior, and sexual identity
- Analyzing Influences
- Analyze how peers, family, media, society, culture, and one’s intersecting identities can influence attitudes, beliefs, and expectations about sexual orientation and sexual identity
- Accessing Information
- Access credible sources of information about sexual orientation
Sexual Health
- Core Concepts
- Compare and contrast the advantages and disadvantages of contraceptives and disease prevention methods
- Identify factors that impact the risk of unintended pregnancy and potential transmission of STIs/STDs, including HIV, from a variety of sexual behaviors, including vaginal, oral, and anal sex
- Describe common symptoms, or lack thereof, and treatments for STIs/STDs, including HIV
- List the major milestones of each trimester of fetal development utilizing medically accurate information
- Explain the state and federal laws related to safe haven, parenting, and sterilization, including their impacts on oppressed communities
- Define reproductive justice and explain its history and how it relates to sexual health
- Analyzing Influences
- Analyze state and federal laws and guidelines that address sexual healthcare services for minors
- Explain the federal and state laws that prohibit the creation, sharing, and viewing of sexually explicit media by minors, including sexting
- Accessing Information
- Identify medically accurate sources of information about and local services that provide contraceptive methods and pregnancy options, including abortion
- Identify medically accurate sources of information about and local services that provide prevention, testing, care, and treatment of STIs/STDs, including HIV
- Goal Setting
- Describe the steps for how a person living with HIV can remain healthy
Interpersonal Violence
- Core Concepts
- Identify the state and federal laws related to intimate partner and sexual violence
- Describe the types of abuse and the cycle of violence as it relates to sexual abuse, domestic violence, dating violence, and gender based violence
- Explain why a victim or survivor of interpersonal violence, including sexual violence, is never to blame for the actions of the perpetrator
- Explain sex trafficking, including recruitment tactics, that sex traffickers and exploiters use to exploit vulnerabilities and recruit youth
- Accessing Information
- Demonstrate how to access credible sources of information and resources for survivors of interpersonal violence, including sexual violence
- Identify credible resources related to sex trafficking and sexual violence prevention and intervention
- Interpersonal Communication
- Demonstrate ways to support a fellow student who is being sexually harassed or abused, or is perpetuating unhealthy or coercive behaviors
- Identify ways to reduce risk in physical and digital settings related to sex trafficking and other potentially harmful situations