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CBC大左派,自由党和极端教纲的支持者,加拿大激进势力的主流媒体魁首。CBC都不得不承认极端性角钢的根本上是理性缺乏的,对孩子有伤害的(有专家和证据)。如果自由党还不及时修正,那只能说自由党为了政治利益不顾孩子。
这篇文章同时倾向于“学校在儿童性教育中的作用可能大于家庭“。这更加说明为什么性角钢更需要谨慎地考虑各种因素,吸收各种意见,需要重新审视,并谨慎地推行。父母们要求得不多。大左派CBC的专家文章强烈地支持了大家对性角钢的疑虑。
当然这篇文章依然是偏见的。它忽视了以”欢愉“为诱惑的”indoctrination”学校性教育,要比以“道德”为出发点的”indoctrination”强烈得多,阴险得多,更会使孩子盲目跟从。
Ontario sex ed: How founded are fears of 'indoctrination'?
Programming young minds isn't that easy, and schools face stiff competition from other influences
By Sean Davidson, CBC News Posted: May 11, 2015 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: May 11, 2015 5:00 AM ET
Since it was introduced earlier this year, Ontario's new sex ed curriculum has set off a storm of protest, much of it from concerned family and religious groups who say it will undermine the values they hope to instill in their children.
Fears that kids will be indoctrinated into an immoral lifestyle is a recurring theme in the many petitions, criticisms and chat boards aimed at the new teaching plan.
It's "a recipe for launching children into a lifestyle of promiscuity ... [that] aims to indoctrinate the next generation," says a lengthy multi-part analysis by the Campaign Life Coalition.
'Every side of the spectrum exaggerates both its breadth and its influence.'- Jonathan Zimmerman
Prominent critic Charles McVety, president of the Institute for Canadian Values, feels the same way.
The curriculum "is a radical ideology," McVety told CBC News. "It is true that 'indoctrination' is sometimes thrown around too lightly, but not in this case."
But education experts say indoctrination isn't that easy, and there's scant evidence sex ed does anything to change a young person's behaviour.
"If you hear anybody on any side of the political spectrum say that sex ed does 'X' behaviorally — that on the right it makes kids have more sex, or on left it makes them use condoms — if they're speaking with great certainty you can pretty much write them off as an ideologue," says Jonathan Zimmerman, a professor of history and education at New York University and author of Too Hot to Handle, a history of sexual education.
"Every side of the spectrum exaggerates both its breadth and its influence," he says.
Attitude and behaviour
For evidence, Zimmerman cites a 2009 study that compared teen pregnancy rates among European countries with different approaches to sexual education.
NYU's Jonathan Zimmerman is the author of Too Hot to Handle, a history of sex ed. (New York University)
Progressive Sweden and "appallingly bad" on the education front Italy were among the countries with the fewest pregnancies — suggesting sex ed wasn't a "relevant variable."
Zimmerman says sex ed can influence attitude, but "attitude and behaviour are very different, and it is much harder to influence the latter."
McVety disagrees, and says the power to influence both is "the greatest horror" of Ontario's approach to sex ed.
He feels that the curriculum's controversial section on gender identity threatens to confuse children, and could set them on the road to serious mental health problems.
"If you take little eight year olds … and teach them gender dysphoria, teach them they may not be the gender of their body, you can't tell me that that would have zero impact on all children," he says.
Parents, peers, media
Zimmerman says he's not against sex ed in schools, but suggests people should be realistic about what it can accomplish.
"We should be thinking in broader terms about all the other institutions that educate," he says.
Those institutions include parents, friends and the media.
What's more, until a child is six or seven, parents trump all, says Tracy Vaillancourt, a professor of education and psychology at the University of Ottawa. Ontario's new curriculum will introduce sex ed to children that age in Grade 1.
"The influence of home is greater than the influence of peers or schools" during those early years, she says, adding that religious and political beliefs are "highly influenced by parents."
But as the child grows up, mom and dad lose influence and must share it — mainly with peers and the media.
Faye Mishna, dean and professor of social work at the University of Toronto says that while schools can influence a child's belief system and behaviour — through the curriculum, the climate, the behaviour of teachers and other factors — the notion that they could indoctrinate a student is largely a myth.
"School is influential in many ways," Mishna says, but to accept a belief system without question a child "would have to be pretty cut off from the world."
"You would have to start young and continue probably through adolescence, with little outside influence to balance."
Indoctrination can happen
Vaillancourt says indoctrination does sometimes happen, but it takes effort.
"The individual would need to be getting the same message from many different sources who are perceived to have authority," she says.
Vaillancourt cites the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the polygamous splinter group of the Mormons, as an example.
Members of the group in the isolated community of Bountiful, B.C., have been repeatedly investigated by the RCMP over allegations including the trafficking of child brides — leading to polygamy and child-related charges in 2014.
"But keep in mind," Vaillancourt says, that "even with all of the controls in place and scripted dogma, there were still members of that community who did not agree with [the group's] doctrine or practices."
McVety agrees parents are the most important influences during a child's formative years, but maintains schools are a powerful force that, in his view, tend to come out on top. "You can argue whether parents or teachers have greater influence but you can't argue parents and teachers have no influence."
"We always advise parents, with any issue, that you're best off talking to your children beforehand, so that the child is prepared to repel the indoctrination attempts."
"This is common practice but unfortunately … the school wins."
继续反对极端教纲,反对用孩子做实验鼠,
支持少数群体的平权,支持父母维护权力。
这篇文章同时倾向于“学校在儿童性教育中的作用可能大于家庭“。这更加说明为什么性角钢更需要谨慎地考虑各种因素,吸收各种意见,需要重新审视,并谨慎地推行。父母们要求得不多。大左派CBC的专家文章强烈地支持了大家对性角钢的疑虑。
当然这篇文章依然是偏见的。它忽视了以”欢愉“为诱惑的”indoctrination”学校性教育,要比以“道德”为出发点的”indoctrination”强烈得多,阴险得多,更会使孩子盲目跟从。
Ontario sex ed: How founded are fears of 'indoctrination'?
Programming young minds isn't that easy, and schools face stiff competition from other influences
By Sean Davidson, CBC News Posted: May 11, 2015 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: May 11, 2015 5:00 AM ET
Since it was introduced earlier this year, Ontario's new sex ed curriculum has set off a storm of protest, much of it from concerned family and religious groups who say it will undermine the values they hope to instill in their children.
Fears that kids will be indoctrinated into an immoral lifestyle is a recurring theme in the many petitions, criticisms and chat boards aimed at the new teaching plan.
It's "a recipe for launching children into a lifestyle of promiscuity ... [that] aims to indoctrinate the next generation," says a lengthy multi-part analysis by the Campaign Life Coalition.
'Every side of the spectrum exaggerates both its breadth and its influence.'- Jonathan Zimmerman
Prominent critic Charles McVety, president of the Institute for Canadian Values, feels the same way.
The curriculum "is a radical ideology," McVety told CBC News. "It is true that 'indoctrination' is sometimes thrown around too lightly, but not in this case."
But education experts say indoctrination isn't that easy, and there's scant evidence sex ed does anything to change a young person's behaviour.
"If you hear anybody on any side of the political spectrum say that sex ed does 'X' behaviorally — that on the right it makes kids have more sex, or on left it makes them use condoms — if they're speaking with great certainty you can pretty much write them off as an ideologue," says Jonathan Zimmerman, a professor of history and education at New York University and author of Too Hot to Handle, a history of sexual education.
"Every side of the spectrum exaggerates both its breadth and its influence," he says.
Attitude and behaviour
For evidence, Zimmerman cites a 2009 study that compared teen pregnancy rates among European countries with different approaches to sexual education.
NYU's Jonathan Zimmerman is the author of Too Hot to Handle, a history of sex ed. (New York University)
Progressive Sweden and "appallingly bad" on the education front Italy were among the countries with the fewest pregnancies — suggesting sex ed wasn't a "relevant variable."
Zimmerman says sex ed can influence attitude, but "attitude and behaviour are very different, and it is much harder to influence the latter."
McVety disagrees, and says the power to influence both is "the greatest horror" of Ontario's approach to sex ed.
He feels that the curriculum's controversial section on gender identity threatens to confuse children, and could set them on the road to serious mental health problems.
"If you take little eight year olds … and teach them gender dysphoria, teach them they may not be the gender of their body, you can't tell me that that would have zero impact on all children," he says.
Parents, peers, media
Zimmerman says he's not against sex ed in schools, but suggests people should be realistic about what it can accomplish.
"We should be thinking in broader terms about all the other institutions that educate," he says.
Those institutions include parents, friends and the media.
What's more, until a child is six or seven, parents trump all, says Tracy Vaillancourt, a professor of education and psychology at the University of Ottawa. Ontario's new curriculum will introduce sex ed to children that age in Grade 1.
"The influence of home is greater than the influence of peers or schools" during those early years, she says, adding that religious and political beliefs are "highly influenced by parents."
But as the child grows up, mom and dad lose influence and must share it — mainly with peers and the media.
Faye Mishna, dean and professor of social work at the University of Toronto says that while schools can influence a child's belief system and behaviour — through the curriculum, the climate, the behaviour of teachers and other factors — the notion that they could indoctrinate a student is largely a myth.
"School is influential in many ways," Mishna says, but to accept a belief system without question a child "would have to be pretty cut off from the world."
"You would have to start young and continue probably through adolescence, with little outside influence to balance."
Indoctrination can happen
Vaillancourt says indoctrination does sometimes happen, but it takes effort.
"The individual would need to be getting the same message from many different sources who are perceived to have authority," she says.
Vaillancourt cites the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the polygamous splinter group of the Mormons, as an example.
Members of the group in the isolated community of Bountiful, B.C., have been repeatedly investigated by the RCMP over allegations including the trafficking of child brides — leading to polygamy and child-related charges in 2014.
"But keep in mind," Vaillancourt says, that "even with all of the controls in place and scripted dogma, there were still members of that community who did not agree with [the group's] doctrine or practices."
McVety agrees parents are the most important influences during a child's formative years, but maintains schools are a powerful force that, in his view, tend to come out on top. "You can argue whether parents or teachers have greater influence but you can't argue parents and teachers have no influence."
"We always advise parents, with any issue, that you're best off talking to your children beforehand, so that the child is prepared to repel the indoctrination attempts."
"This is common practice but unfortunately … the school wins."
继续反对极端教纲,反对用孩子做实验鼠,
支持少数群体的平权,支持父母维护权力。