Creek Speak | Page 29

SCHS Opinion The editorial section Journalism students are notoriously opinionated, and this semester’s crop is no exception. Having spent countless hours debating current events in the journalism industry, such as why defamation law doesn’t touch presidential candidates and whether the burkini ban in France infringes on free speech, journalism students were asked to write three opinion pieces for this issue. I challenged the students not only to identify a problem but to suggest thoughtful, workable, even radical solutions. Their editorials certainly got me thinking, and I hope they’ll have the same impact on you. Sarah Heilbronner Sex Ed: Finding the Information by Josh Soto Take a deep breath, guys. I understand this topic is taboo; I get it, but this needs to be addressed. School: not all of us are straight, and the information you give us about how to have safe sex between straight partners does not help and is a waste of time. During middle school and freshman year for health classes, they don’t dare to break the ice to explain anything more in sex education. It is 2016 now, and according to studies from out.com, “Less than 50% of teens identify as straight.” This means a big proportion of high school students are identified as not straight. Even though this might be uncomfortable, schools need to start giving more information about sexual protection for all types of couples. According ​ to ​The New York Times, “only 4% of schools mention about non-straight sex education” and that “is not enough for 50% of teenagers that are not straight.” I understand that there are reasons why people don’t mention gay sex ed, but at this point we need to start teaching about it. Sex ed is not just about a man and a woman; there’s much more to it. ​Rutgers.edu states that only four states are LGBT-inclusive in this topic, and that’s not enough these days. ​People need to understand this, and schools need to start teaching this as soon as possible.