Persuasive Essay On Sex Education

1261 Words3 Pages

Over the recent years, I have seen an influx of teenage pregnancy in my county, Franklin County. I was not sure if it had always been like this and I was just finally realizing it more because I was growing up with the people who were getting pregnant or were school systems and parents just starting to fail to teach children about abstinence and contraceptive methods. In Franklin County, we never had anyone teach us in depth about sex education. “Why was that?” I would always think. I soon came to realize for classes about sex education, the Franklin County School System would need the money to promote these types of classes and that is something we simply did not have. Usually, the money the school system gets comes from taxes of the citizens, …show more content…

In these poor counties, there are less resources and money to provide teens with the sex education they need. As I stated before, if the citizens are poor, the school will be poor. Budgets for the school systems are created through taxes received from the state and the taxes from the state are collected from every working citizen. Now, if many of these citizens have low paying jobs, the state will collect little to no taxes from the citizens. Then the state government has to spread these little to no taxes over an abundance of things they have to pay for, leaving school systems with barely any money at all. With no money, schools can only afford to teach basic material such as math and reading. They have no time or finances to create programs about sex education or even drug resistance. Many school-aged children end up learning information about these topics through media or peers and become wrongly …show more content…

They probably believe it is the parent’s job, but if so why are we still seeing high rates of teen pregnancy in areas of low household income. How would those two correlate, based on my previous observations and thoughts, if it is the parent’s job to teach about sex education? I come from a family where both of my parents work full time to keep us living, so trust me when I say in a household of low income there is literally no time to talk about sex education. The parents are either working to keep a roof over the child’s head or sleeping, so they could be well rested to work some more. In those families, when you do have the time to bond with your children, talking about sex is the last thing on your agenda. The parents may also not be well educated on sex because of the environment they grew up in, the same as their child, and they could probably only tell you as much as a peer. Also, in areas of low household income, it is more difficult to afford contraceptives such as birth control and condoms, if you are sexually active. All around, teens who grow up in poverty have less resources to learn about and have safe

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