A dozen women, sitting around a square table, are chatting, rapid-fire, about sex. But this is nothing unusual. These women always talk about sex. They are sex educators: experts in explaining sexuality and relationships to children and adolescents, hired by state schools, fancy private schools and conservative Catholic schools. A creeping conservatism, underwritten by lingering nervousness from the controversy over Safe Schools — a program that helped schools support same-sex-attracted, intersex and gender-diverse students — has narrowed what many parents and principals are comfortable with. Anticipating parental backlash to these materials, one principal this year cancelled a Family Planning Victoria session altogether.
Young women are having more sex dreams now than 50 years ago
Girls as young as 11 are being tricked into filming ‘self-generated’ sex videos – The Sun
While we may associate sexy dreams with men a lot more than we do women, it seems the latter is having more of the saucy stuff than we think. A study from the University of Freiburg in Germany found that a fifth of women under 30 had erotic thoughts. The researchers asked 2, 16 to year-olds about the nature of their dreams and found the highest levels of eroticism in those aged One in five also admitted to playing out their fantasies in late-night thoughts before snoozing off which could explain the ideas being transferred into dreams.
Print article. At my own house, the conversation began even earlier. At 2, my daughter spotted a scar on my stomach, and I fumbled my way through a TMI explanation of a C-section: my first sex talk fail. Whether the first sex question happens in private or very much in public, it catches almost every parent off guard. Although teenagers today are waiting longer to have sex, research shows that 13 percent have had sex by age 15, and by their 19th birthday, seven in 10 teens have had intercourse.
By Australian Associated Press. A serious sex offender has walked from court with a suspended sentence for abusing two young boys, amid fresh allegations involving three other children. Gregory Webb, 60, was handed a two-year prison sentence in Melbourne 's County Court on Thursday, but won't spend a day behind bars provided he's of good behaviour for three years. The Horsham man pleaded guilty to six charges of indecent assault against two teenage boys, dating back to the s when he was aged between 18 and His lawyer Paul Smallwood said Webb was the subject of ongoing investigations into allegations made by three children, but said no charges had been laid.