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Sexual Attitudes and Abstinence
Among Christian Youth
Paul A.
Twelker
Professor Emeritus of Psychology
Trinity College
Trinity International University
Deerfield, Illinois
http://wvvw.tiu.edu/psychology/Twelker/Attitudes.htm
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Please cite the document as follows: Twelker, Paul A. (2003).
Sexual Attitudes and Abstinence Among Christian Youth.
Internet resource available at URL: <http://www.tiu.edu/psychology/Twelker/Attitudes.htm
> (last updated
October 04, 2008).
Copyright © 2003 Paul A. Twelker.
Introduction
In a
previous paper, Youth, Abstinence, and the One-Flesh Union (Twelker,
2002) I discussed two topics: first, the theology of the
one-flesh union concept and its importance, and second, the
implications of my research on sexual behaviors of
Christian youth on the fostering of abstinence. This paper
extends the discussion by considering the sexual attitudes
and opinions of Christian youth.
In my
previous paper, I made a disturbing claim: the message that the
Church preaches on sex fails to affect a significant proportion
of the Church's young people. This is due in part to the nature
of the message in that youth are asked to make ethical choices
based on legalistic rules rather than sound Biblical principles
that by necessity must include the concept of the one-flesh
union. The prohibition of premarital intercourse, when
followed, fails to provide any help on deciding exactly what
behaviors are appropriate at various levels of intimacy. This
leads to youth testing the limits of the prohibition rule by any
means imaginable to the point that oral sex (and most other
sexual expressions) become permissible, at least in later stages
of intimacy (however vaguely defined). The impotence of the
Church can also be traced to the strong societal influences that
affect youth, such as the media, peer pressure, and relaxed
values and morality.
My first
paper presented data on sexual behaviors of Christian youth. In
this paper, I will present data on their attitudes. This will
set the stage for a comparison of what youth do and what youth
say. Data were collected from students at a Midwestern
Christian college from 1986 to the present Students in an
annual Human Sexuality class were invited to participate in the
survey, the same one used by Coles and Stokes (1985). Completed
surveys were obtained from 173 males and 203 females (mean age =
20.65 years). Since this represents a convenience sample of
youth that self-selected themselves into a somewhat unique
course, inferences to the general college population or the
Christian college population at large, especially regarding the
marginal percentages, must be made with a great deal of
caution. However, the relationships between the variables and
sex, male or female, are probably more representational of what
might be found within the larger Christian college community.
What Sexual
Behaviors Are Permissible for a Female?
This
section and the next examines what youth say about five sexual
behaviors at various stages of a relationship: the first date
when the couple are strangers, the dating stage, the going
together stage, the "in love" stage, and the planning to be
married stage. Inasmuch as possible, each stage is examined
separately except when the statistical assumptions were
violated. In this case, categories were collapsed in logical
ways. Percentages that are bold-faced signify that that
particular percentage was statistically different from chance,
as revealed by an analysis of standardized residuals. Finally,
it should be noted that the construction of the survey question
forced respondents to select the one sexual behavior that
represented the limit of their sexual expression at each stage
of relationship. Because of this limitation, there is not a
direct way to compare their attitude against their behavior.
As shown
by Table 1, the majority of the students (80 percent) did not
approve of sexual behaviors for a girl if the partners were
strangers. Only three percent approved of the girl having oral
sex or intercourse, while 17 percent approved of making out or
touching genitals. There were statistically significant gender
differences: more males than females approved of a girl making
out (22 percent of males vs.12 percent of females) or having
sexual intercourse (five percent males vs. less than one percent
females) while more females than males approved of no sexual
behavior (87 percent of females vs. 73 percent of males, χ2
= 15.46, p < .001).
Table 1.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females in Relationship with
Strangers

It is
impossible to mind read these students with respect to what they
had in mind when they considered the next stage, dating (refer
to Table 2). The definition of dating has changed through the
years, and probably differs in different subcultures. However,
it is clear that sexual attitudes become more liberal at this
stage. Here, one-half of the students feel that it is OK for a
girl to make out if the partners are dating. This is an increase
of 33 percent from the stranger stage. Six percent said it was
OK to touch genitals, and five percent said it was OK to have
either oral sex or intercourse. Thirty-four percent said that no
activity was OK for a girl to do if the partners were dating.
However, there were gender differences: more males than females
said it was OK to touch genitals (eight percent males vs. four
percent females). The difference for sexual intercourse is
especially striking: nine percent of males vs. only one percent
of females (χ2 = 18.11, p = .001).
Table 2.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females in a Dating Relationship

Again, it
is impossible to definitively define what is meant by "going
together". For most youth, this would imply that each person
has but a single, exclusive partner. Over one-half of the
students feel that it is OK for a girl to make out if the
partners are going with each other (refer to Table 3). Eleven
percent said it was OK to touch genitals, 8 percent said it was
OK to have oral sex , and 9 percent said it was OK to have
intercourse. Sixteen percent said that no activity was
permissible for a girl to do if the partners were going
together. However, there were gender differences: more females
than males said it was OK to make out (65 percent for females
vs. 47 percent for males). The sex difference for sexual
intercourse is especially striking: 15 percent of males vs. only
4 percent of females (χ2 = 19.06, p = .001)
Table 3.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females Who are Going Together
with a Partner

As shown
in Table 4, forty-six percent of the students said that it was
OK for a girl to make out if the partners were in love. Smaller
numbers of students approved of girls touching genitals, having
oral sex, or having intercourse (14 percent, 13 percent and 14
percent respectively). However, there were gender differences:
more males than females approved of girls having sexual
intercourse if the partners were in love (20 percent of males
vs. 8 percent of females, χ2 = 13.46, p = .009).
Other gender differences were not statistically significant.
Table 4.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females Who are in Love with Their
Partner

As
revealed in Table 5, forty-three percent of the students feel
that it is OK for a girl to make out if the partners are
planning marriage. Thirteen percent said it was OK to touch
genitals, and 18 percent said it was OK to have either oral sex
or intercourse. Only 8 percent said that no activity was
permissible for a girl to do if the partners were planning
marriage. However, there were gender differences: more females
than males said it was OK for girls to touch genitals (17
percent for females vs. 9 percent for males) while more males
than females said it was OK to have intercourse (25 percent for
males vs. 12 percent for females, χ2 = 14.87, p =
.005). The differences for oral sex and making out were
statistically nonsignificant.
Table 5.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females Who are Planning Marriage
with a Partner

In
summary, it appears that at each stage of the relationship, both
males and females liberalize the appropriateness of sexual
behaviors for females. For example, five percent of the males
approve of sexual intercourse for a girl with a stranger while
less than one percent of the females approve of this behavior.
But by the time the couple are planning marriage, 25 percent of
the boys and 12 percent of the girls approve of intercourse.
This latter "approval rating" is far below the actual sexual
intercourse rate for the Christian youth surveyed (roughly 54
percent for males and 36 percent for females). There is
evidence that intercourse is engaged in at all stages of the
relationship: twenty-eight percent of the youth surveyed related
to their sexual partner as a "friend" (Twelker, 2002). The
bottom line is that what youth say they approve of is very
different that what they actually do.
What Sexual
Behaviors Are Permissible for a Male?
Most
students (76 percent) felt that no sexual activity was
appropriate for a boy to do if the partners were strangers (see
Table 6). However, there was a gender difference: more males
than females felt that it was OK for a boy to make out or touch
genitals (28 percent of the males vs. 15 percent of the
females). More males felt that it was OK for a boy to have oral
sex or sexual intercourse (7 percent of the males vs.1 percent
of the females, χ2 = 22.09, p < .001).
Table 6.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males in Relationship with
Strangers

Almost
half of the students said that it was OK for a boy to make out
if the partners were dating (see Table 7). Very few students
endorsed touching genitals, having oral sex, or having
intercourse (7 percent, 5 percent, and 5 percent respectively).
However, gender differences were evident: more males than
females said it was OK for a boy to have sexual intercourse (9
percent for males vs. 1 percent for females, χ2 =
21..47, p < .001). The differences between males and females for
the other sexual behaviors were statistically nonsignificant.
Table 7.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males in a Dating Relationship

As shown
by Table 8, slightly over one-half of the students indicated
that it was OK for a boy to make out if the partners were going
with each other. Eleven percent said it was OK to touch
genitals, 85 percent said it was OK to have oral sex, and 10
percent said it was OK to have sexual intercourse. There were
statistically significant gender differences: more females than
males said it was OK for a boy to make out (63 percent for
females vs. 47 percent for males), while more males than females
said it was OK for boys to have intercourse (17 percent for
males vs. 4 percent for females, χ2 = 19.86, p =
.001). Gender differences for touching genitals and oral sex
were not statistically significant.
Table 8.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males Who Are Going Together With
a Partner

Table 9
shows that almost one-half of the students said it was OK for a
boy to make out if the partners were in love. Fifteen percent
said it was OK to touch genitals, 12 percent said it was OK to
have oral sex, and 14 percent said it was OK to have
intercourse. An analysis of gender differences revealed that
more males than females said it was OK for a boy to have sexual
intercourse (21 percent for males vs. 12 percent for females, χ2
= 15.14, p = .004). Other gender differences were smaller and
not statistically significant.
Table 9.
Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males Who Are in Love With Their
Partner

About
forty-three percent of the students said it was OK for a boy to
make out if the partners are planning marriage (see Table 10).
Fourteen percent said it was OK for a boy to touch genitals,
while 17 percent said it was OK for a boy to either have oral
sex or intercourse. Gender differences were evident: more
females said it was OK for a boy to touch genitals (17 percent
for females vs. 9 percent for males) while more boys than girls
said it was OK for a boy to have sexual intercourse (24 percent
for males vs. 11 percent for females, χ2 = 14.27, p =
.006).
Table
10. Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males Who Are Planning
Marriage With a Partner

In
summary, the pattern of liberalization of sexual behaviors
throughout the stages of a relationship follows that of the
females. For example, with respect to sexual intercourse with
strangers, about seven percent of the males approve of
intercourse for males. The rate increases to 24 percent for a
male who is planning marriage with his partner. These rates are
consistent with those reported above for females. When females
are asked about their opinions, less than one percent approve of
a girl having intercourse with a stranger. The rates of
approval are consistent with the rates for females having sex
through the planning marriage stage, where 11 percent of the
females approve of a male having intercourse.
A cursory
inspection of the two sets of data reveal that both males and
females approve of sexual behaviors for males and females at the
various stages similarly. There is a steady liberalization of
sexual behaviors that are approved from the stranger stage to
the planning marriage stage, although females' approval of
intercourse is much more conservative than that of the males.
What Do
Youth Think Parents Think About What is Permissible?
As shown
by Table 11. the majority of students thought that their parents
would not approve of any sexual behavior for a couple that were
strangers (88 percent). However, there was a clear gender
difference: more males than females felt that making out,
petting, oral sex or sexual intercourse was OK (16.4 percent of
males vs. 9 percent of females, χ2 = 4.93, p =
.02).
Table 11.
Activities That Youth Think Parents Think Are Permissible For
Partners Who Are Strangers

As
revealed in Table 12, the majority of students (56 percent) felt
that their parents would disapprove of all sexual behaviors for
a couple who were dating, a dramatic decrease from the partners
as strangers percentage. Forty-one percent of the students felt
that their parents would approve of making out or touching
genitals. Only 2.8% believed their parents would approve of oral
sex or sexual intercourse. Gender differences were not
significant (χ2 = 4.12, p = .128).
Table 12.
Activities That Youth Think Parents Think Are Permissible For
Partners Who Are Dating

As shown
in Table 13, about 32 percent of the youth believed that parents
would not approve of any sexual behavior for a couple who are
going with each other. About 63 percent of the students
believed that their parents would approve of making out or touch
genitals if the couple were going with each other (see Table
13). The percentage of students who believed their parent would
approve of oral sex or intercourse increased to 5 percent.
Gender differences were not evident (χ2 = .78, p =
.69).
Table 13.
Activities That Youth Think Parents Think are Permissible For
Partners Who Are Going With Each Other

As shown
by Table 14, the percentage of youth that believe that their
parents would disapprove of any sexual behavior for partners who
were in love dropped to 21 percent. About 71 percent of the
students believed that their parents would approve of making out
or touching genitals when the couple were in love. About 9
percent of the students believed their parents would approve of
oral sex or sexual intercourse. Gender differences were not
evident (χ2 = 1.98, p = .37).
Table 14.
Activities That Youth Think Parents Think Are Permissible For
Partners Who Are In Love

As shown
by Table 15, the percentage of youth who think that their
parents do not approve of any sexual behavior drops to 15
percent. The majority of youth (66 percent) believe that their
parents would approve of making out. Seven percent think their
parents would approve of petting while 12 percent think their
parents would approve of oral sex or intercourse.
Table 15.
Activities That Youth Think Parents Think Are Permissible For
Partners Who Are Planning Marriage

In
summary, if one considers the parents disapproval of sexual
activities, a steady liberalization is seen, from a high of 88
percent for strangers behaving sexually to a low of 15 percent
for a couple planning marriage. However, if the disapproval
percentages for males and female sexual behavior is examined,
the percentages range from a high of 76 percent for males and 80
percent for females who are strangers to a low of 9 percent for
males and 8 percent for females who are planning marriage.
Youths' ratings of their parents disapproval of sexual behaviors
were not all that different from their own, although parents are
seen are slightly more disapproving in all categories.
What Do
Youth Say About Sex Education
Table 16
reveals that a small majority of students felt that their
parents taught them that sex was healthy and normal (58
percent). Only 4 percent felt that their parents taught them
that sex was not healthy and normal, while 38 percent felt that
their parents did not teach them about sex.
Table 16.
Youths' Perceptions of Their Sex Education By Parents

As shown
by Table 17, most youth found it hard to talk with their father
about sex (76 percent). There were gender differences: more
females than males found it harder to talk with their father
about sex (85 percent vs. 65 percent, χ2 = 20.56, p =
.000).
Table 17.
Youths' Perceptions About Communication With Their Father

Table 18
reveals that the majority of youth found it hard to talk to
their mother about sex (56 percent). However, there was a
significant gender difference: more males than females found it
hard to talk about sex with their mothers (66 percent vs. 47
percent, χ2 = 13.29, p = .000).
Table 18.
Youths' Perceptions About Communication With Their Mother

Table 19
reveals that most youth receive information about reproduction
from schools (48 percent). Parents provide information to about
23 percent of the youth, while friends come in a distant third
at 16 percent. There are no significant gender differences (χ2
= 1.43, p = .840).
Table 19.
Source of Information About Reproduction

As shown
in Table 20, most youth receive their information about birth
control from school (40 percent). Parents only account for
about nine percent of the information while friends account for
double that amount, 18 percent. However, gender differences are
statistically significant (χ2 = 30.82 , p = .000).
Males receive more information than females from their sex
partner while females receive more information than males from
clinics, doctors and siblings.
Table 20.
Source of Information About Birth Control

Table 21
reveals that 40 percent of the youths relied on friends to
provide information about masturbation, while only three percent
gained information from parents. The media provided 29 percent
of the youth information about masturbation. There were
statistically significant gender differences (χ2 =
13.28, p = .021). More males than females gained information
from friends while more females than males gained information
from the media.
Table 21.
Source of Information About Masturbation

Table 22
shows that the most common source of information about sexual
techniques was from the media, with friends ranking second and
sex partners ranking a distant third (35 percent, 31 percent,
and 19 percent respectively). There were no gender differences
that were statistically significant ((χ2 = 2.89, p =
.576).
Table 22.
Source of Information About Sexual Techniques

As shown
by Table 23, youth receive most of their information about
homosexuality from the media (41 percent). Friends are the next
most used source, followed by school (26 percent and 21 percent,
respectively). Gender differences are not statistically
significant (χ2 = 1.43, p = .840).
Table 23.
Source of Information About Homosexuality

As shown
in Table 24, almost one half of the youths receive their
information from friends. Parents provide information to only
about 14 percent of the youth, which is about the same
percentage attributed to sexual partners (13 percent).
Table
24. Youths' Perception About Whom They Would Talk To For Sex
Education

Youths'
Perceptions About Their Peers
When
asked about whether their same-sex friends thought a student has
had intercourse, only four percent answered "none" (see Table
25). Thirty-seven percent answered "a few", 23 percent answered
"about half", 30 percent answered "most", and only 6 percent
answered "all". However, there were significant gender
differences. More males than females answered "most" (35 percent
vs. 26 percent) or "all (9 percent vs. 3 percent) while more
females than males answered "about half" (26 percent of females
vs. 19 percent of males) (χ2 = 10.73, p = .03).
Table 25.
Youths' Perceptions About Same Sex Friends Who Think They Have
Had Intercourse

As
revealed in Table 26, 76 percent of the respondents thought that
most or all of their same-sex friends have had intercourse.
Only 3 percent believed that none of their friends, or a few of
their friends have had intercourse. Twenty-two percent believed
that about half of their friends have had intercourse. Gender
differences were nonsignificant. Clearly, the expectation is
held by these youth that having intercourse is the norm for
their peers.
Table 26.
Youths' Perceptions About Same-Sex Friends Having Intercourse

As
revealed in Table 27, the majority of students did not feel
pressure from the same-sex friends to have intercourse (66
percent). However, gender differences were evident. More females
than males felt no pressure from their same-sex friends to have
intercourse (83 percent vs. 46 percent, χ2 = 57.42, p
< .001). More males than females reported feeling either a small
amount, a medium amount, a large amount or a great deal of
pressure from their same-sex friends.
Table 27.
Youths' Perceptions About Same-Sex Peer Pressure to Have
Intercourse

As seen
in Table 28, the majority of college students felt no pressure
from their boyfriend or girlfriend to have intercourse (62
percent). Seventeen percent reported a small amount of pressure
while 12 percent reported a medium amount of pressure to have
intercourse. Very few students felt a large amount or great deal
of pressure (5 percent and 3 percent, respectively). Gender
differences were nonsignificant.
Table 28.
Youths' Perceptions Of Pressure From Partners To Have
Intercourse

Most
students (73 percent) felt that their friends would be shocked
if they thought they had intercourse (see Table 29). However,
more females than males felt this way (83 percent of the females
vs. 60 percent of the males, χ2 = 24.76, p < .001).
Table 29.
Youths' Perceptions of Their Friends Reactions to Their Having
Intercourse

As
revealed in Table 30, most students felt that it was not
socially backward for a person to be a virgin at their age (94
percent). However, there were gender differences: more males
than females felt that a virgin their age was socially backward
(9 percent vs. 3 percent, χ2 = 8.14, p = .004).
Table 30.
Youths' Perceptions About Virginity Indicating Social
Backwardness

As shown
by Table 31, more students felt that their sexual activity was
influenced by their parents' thinking than not (54 percent vs.
46 percent). There were gender differences: more females than
males felt that parents influenced their sexual activity (60
percent vs. 49 percent, χ2 = 4.48, p = .022).
Table 31.
Youths' Perceptions of Parental Influence on Their Sexual
Activity

The
majority of students (91 percent) felt that teens were doing
more things sexually than before (see Table 32). There were no
significant gender differences ( χ2 = .41, p = .258).
Table 32.
Youths' Perceptions About Increase in Teen Sexual Activity

As
revealed in Table 33, most students did not believe it was a
good idea to cohabit (91 percent). However, more females than
males felt this way (96 percent females vs. 85 percent males, χ2
= 14.80, p < .001).
Table 33.
Youths' Perceptions About Desirability of Cohabitation

The point
was made above that what youth say they approve (or do not
approve) is very different that what they actually do. These
data on how these respondents perceive their peers have
important implications in interpreting these data. When asked
whether their same-sex friends thought they had intercourse,
only four percent answered "none" and 41 percent answered most
or all (see Table 19). Further, 73 percent of these respondents
(73 percent) felt that their friends would be shocked if they
thought they had intercourse (see Table 29). Yet when these
same respondents were asked if they thought that their same-sex
friends have had intercourse, 76 percent of the respondents
thought that most or all of their friends have had intercourse.
Only 3 percent believed that none of their friends, or at most a
few of their friends, have had intercourse. Twenty-two percent
believed that about half of their friends have had intercourse.
Clearly, the expectation is held by these youth that having
intercourse is the norm for their peers. Yet they are able to
say that these same peers do not necessarily see them as having
intercourse, and would in fact be shocked if they have! This
represents a logical inconsistency! The tragedy of holding
these views is that youth act on these expectations. When they
see their peers as seeing them as different, there is a subtle
pressure to act in similar ways, that is, to engage in
intercourse. Youth pastors need to counteract the myth that
most youth are having sex. Clearly, from the data reported here
(Walker, 2002), and elsewhere, the majority of youth are not
having sex. And the data clearly suggest that the myth does not
have substance because these youth hold false perceptions about
how their friends perceive them
Youths'
Perceptions About Gender Issues
Most
students felt that it would be better if women work at home
while men pursue careers, as revealed by Table 34. There were no
significant gender differences revealed (χ2 = .10, p
= .75).
Table 34.
Youths' Perceptions About Women Staying At Home

As
revealed in Table 35, 78 percent of the respondents felt that
women should be allowed to do anything physically possible.
There were no gender differences revealed (χ2 = .84,
p = .21).
Table 35.
Youths' Perceptions About Women Being Permitted To Do Any Job

How Do
Sexual Attitudes Relate to Level of Religious
Commitment?
As shown
in Table 36, there is a significant relationship between
religious commitment and sexual attitudes with respect to what
is appropriate for females when the partners are strangers: as
religious commitment increases, attitudes toward making out,
petting, oral sex and intercourse become increasingly
negative (χ2 = 42.23 p < .001).
Table 36.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Strangers, and Religious Commitment

Tables 37
through 40 reveal statistically significant relationships
between religious commitment and sexual attitudes with respect
to what is considered appropriate sexual behaviors for women.
In each case, as religious commitment increases, youth find
making out and petting more appropriate for women while oral sex
or intercourse are found less appropriate (Table 37, χ2
= 71.18, p = .000; Table 38, χ2 = 73.73, p < .001;
Table 39, χ2 =
80.92, p =
.000; Table 40,
P2χ2
=
66.48, p < .001). It is interesting to note the percentages of
youth approving of oral sex and intercourse for women increases
at each level of the relationship. If the partners are
strangers, less than one percent of the youth in the highest
category of religious commitment approve of oral sex or
intercourse for women. The percentages for partners dating,
partners going together, partners in love, and partners planning
marriage, are 3 percent, 8 percent, 16 percent, and 25 percent,
respectively. On the other hand, the percentages of youth who
state they have a medium level of religious commitment and who
approve of oral sex or intercourse for women are remarkably
higher: 6 percent, 16 percent, 41 percent, 65 percent, and 77
percent, respectively, for the various stages of relationship as
noted above.
Table 37.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners are Dating, and Religious Commitment

Table 38.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Going Together, and Religious Commitment

Table 39.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are In Love, and Religious Commitment

Table 40.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Planning Marriage, and Religious
Commitment

As shown
in Table 41 , there is a statistically significant relationship
between sexual attitudes about what is appropriate for males in
a relationship with a stranger, and religious commitment (χ2
= 39.99, p < .001). Youth who state that they have high levels
of religious commitment are least approving of boys making out
or petting (17 percent) while youth with medium levels of
commitment are most approving of boys making out and petting (36
percent). On the other hand, youth who are most approving of
oral sex or intercourse show the least religious commitment (16
percent).
Table 41.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Strangers, and Religious Commitment

Tables 42
through 44 show statistically significant relations between
sexual attitudes regarding appropriate sexual behaviors for
boys, and religious commitment. At each level of relationship,
from partners dating, partners going together, and partners "in
love", as religious commitment increases, youth find oral sex
and intercourse less appropriate for women. (Table 42, χ2
= 59.49, p = .000; Table 43, χ2 =
72.84, p < .001; Table 44, χ2 =
78.86, p < .001). Table 45 also shows a significant
relationship between sexual attitudes and religious commitment,
but there is an interesting deviation from the other three
relationship stages. When partners are planning marriage, youth
with the highest levels of religious commitment again find oral
sex and intercourse least appropriate for boys (24 percent), but
youth with medium levels of commitment (not the lowest levels)
find oral sex and intercourse most appropriate for boys (77
percent, χ2 = 70.46, p < .001).
It is
instructive to again note the percentages of youth approving of
oral sex and intercourse for men increases at each level of the
relationship. If the partners are strangers, only one percent
of the youth in the highest category of religious commitment
approve of oral sex or intercourse for boys. The percentages
for partners dating, partners going together, partners in love,
and partners planning marriage, are 4 percent, 9 percent, 16
percent, and 24 percent, respectively. These percentages are
for all practical purposes identical with those obtained for
girls. On the other hand, the percentages of youth who state
they have a medium level of religious commitment and who approve
of oral sex or intercourse for women are remarkably higher: 8
percent, 18 percent, 44 percent, 63 percent, and 77 percent,
respectively, for the various stages of relationship as noted
above. These percentages are very similar to those noted for
girls.
Table 42.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Dating, and Religious Commitment

Table 43.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Going Together, and Religious Commitment

Table 44.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are In Love, and Religious Commitment

Table 45.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Planning Marriage, and Religious
Commitment

How Do
Sexual Attitudes Relate to Parents' Marital Status
As shown
in Table 46, there is no significant relationship between sexual
attitudes of what is appropriate for girls when partners are
strangers, and the parents' marital status (χ2 =
4.66, p = .097).
Table 46.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Strangers, and Parental Marital Status

Table 47
reveals that when partners are dating, youth from intact
families are more apt to approve of making out or petting (60
percent) than youth from non-intact families (43 percent; χ2
= 10.13, p = .006). On the other hand, when partners are
dating, youth from intact families are less apt to approve of
oral sex and intercourse for girls as compared with youth from
non-intact families (8 percent vs. 17 percent).
Table 47.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Dating, and Parental Marital Status

Table 48
reveals that when partners are going with each other, the same
pattern described above applies in this case (χ2
=
10.61, p = .005). Youth from intact families are more apt to
approve of making out or petting (72 percent) than youth from
non-intact families (54 percent). On the other hand, youth from
intact families are less apt to approve of oral sex and
intercourse for girls as compared with youth from non-intact
families (14 percent vs. 27 percent).
Table 48.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Going Together, and Parental Marital
Status

Tables 49
and 50 reveals that although the relationship of sexual
attitudes about what is appropriate for girls and parental
marital status trends in the same direction as noted above for
partners who are in love or planning marriage, the
relationships are non-significant (χ2
=2 .26, p = .332 and χ2 = 3.54, p = .170,
respectively).).
Table 49.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are In Love, and Parental Marital Status

Table 50.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Females
When the Partners Are Planning Marriage, and Parental Marital
Status

As shown
in Table 51, there is no significant relationship between sexual
attitudes of what is appropriate for boys when partners are
strangers, and the parents' marital status (χ2 =
5.34, p = .069).
Table 51.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Strangers, and Parental Marital Status

Table 52
reveals that when partners are dating, youth from intact
families are more apt to approve of boys making out or petting
(59 percent) than youth from non-intact families (41 percent; χ2
= 11.73, p = .003). On the other hand, when partners are
dating, youth from intact families are less apt to approve of
oral sex and intercourse for boys as compared with youth from
non-intact families (8 percent vs.18 percent). These
percentages are very similar to those obtained for girls'
approved behaviors.
Table 52.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Dating, and Parental Marital Status

Table 53
reveals that when partners are going with each other, the same
pattern described above for girls also applies for boys ( χ2
= 9.54, p = .008). Youth from intact families are more apt to
approve of boys making out or petting (70 percent) than youth
from non-intact families (52 percent). On the other hand, youth
from intact families are less apt to approve of oral sex and
intercourse for boys as compared with youth from non-intact
families (16 percent vs. 27 percent).
Table 53.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Going Together, and Parental Marital
Status

As shown
in Tables 54 and 55, there are non-significant relationships
between sexual attitudes about boys' sexual behaviors and
parental marital status for partners in love and planning
marriage (χ2 = 2.60, p = .273 and χ2 =
3.42, p = .181, respectively).
Table 54.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are In Love, and Parental Marital Status

Table 55.
The Relationship Between Approved Sexual Behaviors for Males
When the Partners Are Planning Marriage, and Parental Marital
Status

Reflections
I have a
word of warning when it comes to interpreting these data. Do
not place too much importance on sexual attitudes as though they
have a one-to-one relationship with real-time moral behavior.
Many individuals simply assume that attitudes lead to behavior.
However, Ichheiser (1970) distinguishes between “views in
principles” and “views in fact.” Views in principle are
those views that are held about an issue but have no serious
implications for one’s actions. Views in fact are those
that actually determine one’s actions. The problem, according
to Ichheiser, is that people rarely are able to state their
views in fact. They are usually capable of only stating their
views in principles.
A related
warning is that since many people assume that an individual’s
conscious opinions and evaluations are the major cause of
their actions, they fail to account for other factors that work
against (or for) the individual following their beliefs or
opinions. Three factors that are seen in sequential fashion in
moral development include: 1) fear of parental punishment and
rejection; 2) peer pressure, and social praise or blame; and 3)
maintenance of abstract moral principles. Other factors might
include moral passion, empathy, guilt, remorse or Godly sorrow,
sense of honor (whether rational or irrational), and moral
introspection.
The
discrepancy between how youth think and how youth behave has
been discussed at great lengths. This should come as no
surprise. Writers such as David Elkind have attributed this
discrepancy between thought and action to youths not being fully
able to exercise their newly-developed skills in formal
operational thought. The youth in this study come across as
espousing what might be termed traditional values in a
number of areas including gender roles, cohabitation, and limits
to sexual behavior in relationships. One could argue that
perhaps these are not really values at all, but simply attitudes
or opinions that do not have the commitment behind them that
guides behavior. We hear a lot of rhetoric about the erosion of
values in our society. Perhaps what we are facing is a
Christian subculture that is not being guided by any values at
all, just whims and attitudes and opinions. This argument can
be substantiated by the observation that youth today are being
affected by myths or false expectations about what their
same-sex peers are doing (such as having sex) as well as what
peer are thinking about them (such as shock at their being
sexually active). These data suggest that opinions and
attitudes that are based largely on myths and false perceptions
must be corrected before values can be fostered that guide
abstinence behavior.
How do youth
internalize moral values in a way that assure their
implementation? Hogan (1973) suggests two psychological
dynamics that work toward implementation: sensitivity to social
expectations, and concern for the welfare of those with whom the
youth interacts. In the report on sexual behaviors (Twelker,
2002), discussion centered on how positive expectations (for
example, expectations for marrying a virgin) exhibited a
powerful effect on abstinence. However, not all youth develop
these expectations and use them to enhance abstinence. Further,
the expectations that youth develop are not necessarily positive
or life-enhancing—they can also be negative or dysfunctional.
The second dynamic, concern for others with whom the youth
interacts, would seem even more difficult to develop.
Egocentrism, which develops as adolescents begin using formal
operational thought, plays a huge role here. For a time,
self-centeredness takes center stage in an adolescent’s life.
Perspective-taking and empathy eventually will be developed, but
not at the beginning.
In that same
report (Twelker, 2002), it was also mentioned that sexual
ideology is one of the most important factors
in
determining sexual expressions (cf., DeLamater and MacCorquodale
(1979). It was argued that ideology is a force that dominant
institutions use to legitimize the status quo through the
communication of values, of worldview, and of symbol systems.
It was suggested that ideology forms the basis of self-control.
But a number of institutions with their particular worldviews
compete for youths’ attention. It would be simplistic to view
this competition as an all-or-none game. Rather, the youth most
likely selects parts and pieces from many if not all of the
competing worldviews. Herein lies the problem. How a youth
exercises self control relates to the meanings of the values and
the worldview adopted. If the youth envisions sex as simple
recreation or tension relief without the need for commitment,
self-control takes on a very different meaning than that
suggested by scripture. Using a condom might qualify as
self-control in that it shows both one’s sensitivity to societal
expectations as well as one’s concern for others. If the youth
envisions sex as the occasion for establishing an authentic
one-flesh union, then self-control takes on a very different
form that illustrates Christian thinking and behavior.
If my
premise that sexual attitudes per se do not necessarily have all
that much relevance to sexual behaviors, and they are but one
factor among many that relate to moral implementation, then the
questions remains: what are the implications for parents and
church leaders, with respect to forming Godly values and
worldviews in their children and adolescents? Should the parent
simply stop trying to instill moral attitudes in their
children? Heaven forbid! Sexual attitudes are the building
blocks that teach children to live with authority. That
naturally leads to the youth being able to live with other
people in healthy, functional ways. And that life skill is the
basis for a third skill, living with oneself. Living with
oneself implies living in compliance with internalized ethical
principles. This skill is at the heart of autonomy, in the
sense that the adolescent acts with self-control and
self-regulation. But the communicating of moral attitudes go
hand-in-hand with parenting style. Autonomous (self-regulated)
youth who have close relationships with their parents report
fewer conflicts with their parents, turn to their parents for
advice, and report that they would like to model their lives
after their parents. On the other hand, youth who are not
autonomous and self-regulating are more likely to be rebellious,
negative, and highly involved with their peer group. Parents of
autonomous youth enable in the sense that they accept
adolescents, they help adolescents develop their own ideas
through questions, and they tolerate different opinions.
Parents of non-autonomous youth respond negatively to
adolescents’ expressions of independence, and they cut off
discussion of adolescents’ opinions. But there is more.
Parents must foster increasingly abstract thinking in youth.
They must make sure that beliefs become increasingly rooted in
general principles that have ideological relevance. And
finally, they must reject the notion that all youth have to do
is copy their values (or those of other authority figures)
without making sure that they are increasingly rooted in the
youth’s own value system. And parents must recognize that the
autonomy I am talking about here means having a set of
principles about what is right and wrong, and having priorities
about what is important and what is not. This autonomy must be
rooted in the Church's teaching of a correct, coherent, biblical
worldview with respect to sexuality that results in youth
accepting the importance of thinking and acting Christianly in a
postmodern world. And I have argued that this ideology must
include the primacy of the one-flesh union concept.
There is
another very interesting finding that relates to the remarkable
consistency that was revealed: males were much more likely than
females to permit or encourage intercourse at all stages of a
relationship, for both males and females. However, as the
relationship progresses, females become perceptively more
permissive so that by the time the couple is planning marriage,
the percentage of females agreeing with the males rises to about
46 percent of the male percentage. At the stranger level, less
than 10 percent of the females agreed with the males about
allowing intercourse. This might suggest that the female holds
the key to abstinence by communicating in an assertive manner
her values to the male, and bringing him to agreement on
abstinence.
When it
comes to sex education, parents seem to be falling short of the
ideal. About 38 percent of the youth said that their parent did
not teach them about sex. Males were consistent in their
assessment of the difficulty in talking with parents: over 65
percent found it hard to talk with either parent. Females found
it much harder to talk with father (85 percent) than with mother
(47 percent). If youth were able to talk with their parents,
and vice versa, without getting bent out of shape, youth might
have an opportunity to better understand their parents’
expectations while parents would have a better understanding of
the pressures facing youth today. This could naturally lead to
the formation of a family accountability relationship where the
parents would be the first line of support for their children's
abstinence. Of course, this assumes that parents are serious
about holding the line on abstinence. Unfortunately, data were
not collected from parents in the present study. However,
youths' ratings of their parents’ disapproval of sexual
behaviors were not all that different from their own, although
parents were seen are slightly more disapproving in all
categories. One thing is clear, however: youths' perceptions
about the inadequacy of parental sex education bring into
question their perceptions about what their parents expect.
There is
a general undertone of pessimism among many parents in their own
confidence and ability to teach their children about sex, and
distinguishing right from wrong, and they look to outside
resources to fill that void. A Gallup Poll in 1987 found that
85 percent of parents feel that sex education should be taught
in the schools (West Virginia Department of Education, 1987). A
recent poll of 1,245 adults by Zogby International commissioned
by conservative Christian groups found that most parents want
schools to teach their children sex education but disapprove of
the more explicit guidance commonly used in sex-education
classes, such as masturbation, sexual fantasies, and
homosexuality (Schemo, 2003). Seventy-four percent of parents
approve or strongly approve of abstinence-centered sex
education, while 61.1 percent of parents disapprove or strongly
disapprove of "comprehensive" or "safe-sex" education.
Since
schools in the public sector are not perceived as able to lay
good moral foundations, (let alone keep the peace in the
classroom,) parents are turning to independent schools,
especially church-related schools to teach values. Either way,
parents are bound to be disappointed. The public school will
teach sex education, but often too late, and when it is taught,
it largely assumes that all youth are sexually active. The
church-related school is often out of touch with its youth to
the point that it acts as though most youth are sexually naive,
and its best to keep them that way. In abstinence-only classes,
the issue of contraception can't even be discussed.
Abstinence Programs
A number
of secular programs, often school-based, have begun across the
country in recent years to promote abstinence. Typically, the
program asks a teen to pledge abstinence until marriage.
Recently, a highly publicized report taken from the
federally-funded National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent
Health.by Hannah Bruckner of Yale University and Peter Bearman
of Columbia University has thrown doubt on these programs. These
researchers analyzed data from interviews of 20,000 teen-age
virgins in grades 7 through 12 in 1994 and 1995. Follow-up
interviews were done in 1997 with 14,000 individuals.
The
researchers estimated that close to 10 percent of adolescent
boys and 16 percent of adolescent girls have taken virginity
pledges. Those that gave pledges were more religious and more
oriented toward school. Further, the subsequent decision to
abstain from intercourse seemed related to factors other than
the giving of a pledge. When 30 percent or more of the teens in
a program gave pledges, they were no more likely to delay
intercourse than non-pledgers. On the other hand, when only one
teen took the pledge, it did not have the desired abstinence
effect. Apparently, holding to the pledge required peer
support. Also, among teens 18 and older, pledges made little
difference. The most significant impact occurred among 16- and
17-year-olds.
The pledges
delayed intercourse by about 18 months. Among black females,
for example, the median age of first sexual encounter for those
who took a virginity pledge was 18.6, compared with 16.3 for
those who did not take a pledge. The delay for males was
similar. Among 15-year-olds, 90
percent of the pledgers remained virgins while 82 percent of the
non-pledgers were virgins. At 16, 79 percent of the pledgers
were still virgin while 68 percent of non-pledgers had
abstained. At age 17, 65 percent of the pledgers had not
initiated sex while half of the non-pledgers had initiated sex.
The
researchers also found that the pledgers had fewer sexual
partners, got married earlier, and were less likely to use
condoms. Of those males who pledged abstinence, 59 percent used
a condom during sex while only 40 percent of male pledgers used
a condom. The pledgers also contracted sexually transmitted
diseases (chlamydia, gonorrhea and
trichomoniasis) as often (2.8% vs. 3.5% for whites not
pledging; 18.1% vs. 20.3% for blacks not pledging; 6.7% vs 8.6%
for Hispanics not pledging; 10.5% vs. 5.6% of Asians not
pledging.) These differences were not judged to be
statistically significant. Those infected were less likely to
know they were infected.
It should be
noted that not all abstinence programs are equal. Richard Ross,
one of the founders of the True Love Waits movement and
professor of student ministry at
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas,
points out that most programs offer a limited number of
class sessions led by a stranger, who asks that teens sign a vow
of abstinence in their notebooks at the end of the program. The
True Love Waits program involves weeks of study and discussion
before signing of pledge cards, often in public ceremonies with
family and close friends. Support continues after the pledge
though church youth leaders and peers. Finally, Ross notes that
the pledges are made “to God Himself rather than a notebook”.
Jimmy Hester, a spokesman for True
Love Waits, minimized the importance of the pledge alone. He
claims that the important element missing from other programs is
a commitment to God. The True Love Waits pledge reads,
"Believing that true love waits, I make a commitment to God,
myself, my family, my friends, my future mate, and my future
children to be sexually abstinent from this day until the day I
enter a biblical marriage relationship." To enhance its
program, the True Love Waits movement is planning to challenge
local health organizations, businesses, educational
institutions, government and churches to form a coalition to
provide a consistent abstinence message and support to students
(Curry, 2004; Bearman and Bruckner, 2001).
Certain
national groups such as The Alan Guttmacher Institute, Planned
Parenthood and SIECUS (Sexuality Information and Education
Council of the United States) may tend to view such studies in a
negative light, maintaining that abstinence programs do not
work. Clearly, abstinence programs seem to work in the short
run by postponing sexual intercourse, but the data include the
somber truth that many youth eventually discard the pledge and
engage in intercourse before marriage. And when they do, they
often fail to use protection and end up contracting STDs at the
same rate as non-abstainers. This suggests that most of these
teens are not waiting to have sex with the one they eventually
want to marry, a possibility suggested by data in the present
study. One of the chief contentions of these national groups is
that sex education does not drive teens to experiment earlier,
but enables them to think critically about sexual choices.
Obviously, abstinence education and the pressing for an
abstinence pledge is usually inconsistent with one segment of
sex education that focuses on contraception and perhaps STDs.
These national groups are also critical of the abstinence
pledges in that the higher the number of teens taking the pledge
in a program, the less effect it has. Clearly, more attention
has to be paid to what factors make for a strong and
long-lasting pledge of abstinence. Peter
Bearman went into the study thinking
that the pledges made no difference. "We didn't expect
to see any effect from these pledges, but it was just the
opposite...The average delay among pledgers is 18 months. That
is significant. And that is a pure pledge effect." By that, the
authors mean that "pledging works because it embeds kids in a
community and makes them feel different."
Although
this may be true for some teens, the remarks by Richard Ross and
Jimmy Hester suggests that more is at work here than peer
pressure or community expectations. Indeed, the present study
suggests that the strength of the faith commitment, guilt as a
preventative factor, intactness of the family, and parental
influence have a strong relationship to abstinence as well as
pastoral and peer support.
Abstinence
groups such as True Love Waits are not at all interested in
changing their programs to include information on
contraception. Data from the Bearman and Bruckner study are not
convincing for these folk. Critics of
abstinence-only education see the
findings as evidence that adolescents benefit from sex
education. I would suggest that if the goal is for teens to
wait until marriage to engage in sexual intercourse, then it
does not follow logically that withholding information on
contraception or STDs is dysfunctional to that goal. The
practical failure rates of contraceptive methods can lend
rationale support to abstinence. Further, the fact that
contraception does not protect adequately and completely against
STDs lends further support to the teaching of all relevant facts
about sexuality to teens.
This position is supported by recent changes in thinking by a
number of physicians who collaborated on an abstinence
program, Prescriptions for Parents: A Physicians' Guide to
Adolescence and Sex (Morse, 2003). The program points out that
even when there was a significant decline in the teen birth rate
and sexual activity rate in the 1990’s, the incidence of STDs
increased. Today, one-quarter of all new HIV cases occur in
those aged 21 and younger. Herpes and the human papillomavirus
(HPV), which is linked to cervical cancer, are infecting more
and more teens. More than one in five teenagers and adults in
the United States has genital herpes, and HPV affects 24 million
Americans. The Medical Institute of Sexual Health (MISH)
estimates that 33 percent of all women are infected with
HPV. The people most at risk for
this disease are college and high school students. Estimates of
HPV on college campuses are staggering: Sharon Kennedy, a nurse
practitioner, estimates that about 70 percent of the college
population at Colorado State University is positive for HPV. The
University of California at Berkeley found that almost half of
its female students were infected with HPV.
In a clinical study at the University of Washington, Winer et.
al. (2003) found that the cumulative first-time infection
incidence was 32.3 percent (95% confidence interval: 28.0 to
37.1). Infection in virgins was rare, but any type of
nonpenetrative sexual contact increased the risk of infection.
HPV is spread through skin-to-skin contact, and does not depend
on the exchange of bodily fluids so condoms, whether used
correctly or incorrectly, do not always protect against these
STDs. A single sexual contact with a person infected with HPV,
whether external genital warts are visible or not, carries about
a 60 percent chance of transmission (Cantu & Farish, N.D.).
There is no such thing as safe sex. The only guaranteed method
of stopping this public health epidemic is
sexual abstinence until entering into a lifelong,
monogamous marriage with an uninfected partner. Considering
that one in fifty American women will be diagnosed with cervical
cancer, and that almost all cervical cancer in the United States
is caused by HPV, to withhold
information from adolescents on STDs and the inefficacy of
contraceptive methods in combating these epidemics, is
shortsighted if not inexcusable.
Some
Concluding Thoughts
There are
those who say that it is time that parents assume full
responsibility for teaching and nurturing their children about
sex. Some of these people feel that the school might serve as a
backup, but not the initiator of or prime disseminator of sex
education. For this strategy to succeed, parents must be
comfortable with their own sexuality, well-versed in sexual
ethical decision-making strategies, and comfortable in
initiating sex education with their children. If parents did a
good job, then whatever the school did could be complementary.
Unfortunately, we cannot assume that parents will be in a
position to act as teachers and nurturers without some
assistance in the form of sex education, sexual counseling, or
in some cases, sexual therapy.
I wish I
had an answer to this dilemma. For some Christian families,
public school options that teach comprehensive sex education
will not be satisfactory since it will include information on
masturbation, contraception and homosexuality. For other
Christian families, the favored abstinence program will fall
short if contraception is not included since a significant
portion of the teens will become sexually active. Further, many
programs will fail to show how many precoital sexual behaviors
in addition to sexual intercourse carry the risk of STDs. I am
firmly persuaded that Christian parents must not cease trying to
be salt and light to people in their community, and this
includes speaking out for an appropriate. age-graded sex
education curriculum. On the other hand, parents must accept
primary responsibility for educating their children about
sexuality, and do whatever it takes to make this education
effective. Sex education should begin when the infant is in the
cradle, when she cannot understand a word being said. This will
help desensitize parents and will provide then with valuable
practice in "talking sex" later. Also, the various components
of sex education throughout the child-rearing years should be
initiated about two years earlier than the time thought
appropriate. Most sex education has already be done on the
street and in the locker room before parents get around to it.
Where
does the church fit into all of this? First, it must get its
act together when it comes to a theology of sexuality. The
primacy of the one-flesh union concept must be affirmed, and
thought must be given to the place of singleness as well as
marriage in a Christian's life. Second, the "do nots" and "thou
shalt nots" must be replaced by a reasonable and effective
approach to sexual ethical decision-making where the virtues of
holiness, love, wisdom and ideals and the relationships of self
with God, with others, with oneself, and with created order are
considered (cf., Forlines, 2001). Third, the pastor and youth
pastor must not be allowed to replace parents as primary
opinion-leaders and change-agents. God created the family to
function in this capacity, and the church should support parents
to function as God planned. The emphasis on experience-oriented
worship and teaching, whose effectiveness seems directly related
to the charisma of the leader, must be evolved into
relationship-oriented groups, such as small multi-family
accountability groups. Fourth, the church must recognize the
strong role that the culture and post-modern thought is playing
in socializing its youth. Rather than treating its youth as
though they were pilgrims in a post-modern world, it must
recognize that for the most part, youth have bought into
post-modern thought to the point that they are practitioners
and purveyors of post-modernism.
And what
about the church-related college? What should be its role in
these matters? Apart from the obvious interventions in the
classroom, it seems to me that the church-related college must
attend to parent relations and parental involvement. Now I am
not talking about fostering inappropriate involvement, or rather
enmeshment, that emotionally stifles youth and their legitimate
quest for autonomy. What I am referring to is, first of all,
the information that is being shared with parents about matters
of sexual attitudes and behaviors of college students. Colleges
must communicate honestly about these realities, and in ways
that move them toward problem-solving. The "head-in-the-sand"
approach just won't do anymore. And then, parents must be
encouraged to partner with the college in the pursuit of the
common interest of promoting healthy sexuality and abstinence.
Student development offices, along with academics, should decide
those areas where parents can become involved in constructive
ways, and then discuss these matters openly with parents through
educational venues. These efforts could involve the use of
electronically-enhanced educational programs, such as the
Internet, teleconferencing, chat rooms and message boards. It
is time that faculty as well as student development begin to
share their critical insights with parents. This educational
involvement could extend from the admissions process through
commencement to help parents become effective partners in their
children's development while away at college.
References
Bearman,
Peter S. and Hannah Brückner (2001) .
“Promising the Future: Virginity Pledges and the Transition to
First Intercourse.”
American Journal of Sociology. 106, 4
859-912.
Curry, Erin
(2004) Leaders: True Love Waits
'different' from other programs. Internet resource available at
URL:
http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=17818
Forlines, F.
Leroy (2001). The Quest for Truth: Answering Life's
Inescapable Questions. Nashville: Randall House.
Ichheiser,
G. (1970). Appearances and reality. San Francisco
: Jossey-Bass.
Hogan, R.
(1973). Moral conduct and moral character. Psychological
Bulletin, 79, 217-232.
Morse, Jodie
(2003). An Rx for Teen Sex. Internet resource available at URL:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/subscriber/0,10987,1101021007-356071,00.html
Schemo,
Diana Jean (2003). Explicit Sex Education Is Opposed By Most
Parents in Survey. New York: The New York Times (
February 13,
2003
). Internet resource available at URL:
www.nytimes.com/2003/02/13/education/13SEX.html?ex=1066449600&en=ad33fe9711b8bc7f&ei=5070
Twelker,
Paul A. (2002) Youth, Abstinence and the One-Flesh Union. Paper
presented at the American Association of Christian Counselors
2002 Super Conference, Dallas, Texas, April 24-26, 2002.
Internet resource available at URL: <http://www.tiu.edu/psychology/Twelker/AACC_Paper.htm
> (last updated
October 04, 2008).
Yvette C.
Cantu and Heather E. Farish (N.D.).
The Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Epidemic: Condoms Don’t Work.
Family Research Council, Boulder Colorado. Internet resource
available at URL: http://www.ccv.org/images/HPV-Epidemic.PDF.
Winer, R. L., Lee, S. K., Hughes, J. P., Adam, D. E., Kiviat, N.
B., and Koutsky, L. A. (2003) Genital
human papillomavirus infection: incidence and risk factors in a
cohort of female university students. Am J Epidemiol,
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