Puberty Sexual Education For Boys And Girls 1991 - English29l Updated
Subject: Resource Share - Puberty Sexual Education for Boys and Girls (1991 English Updated Ed.)
I am sharing a digitized copy of the educational video/resource titled "Puberty Sexual Education for Boys and Girls," specifically the updated 1991 English release.
While the production values are certainly dated by modern standards, this material remains an interesting artifact of health education curriculum from the late 20th century. It covers the fundamental biological and physiological changes experienced during adolescence, presented in a format that was standard for classrooms of that era.
Key Details:
Content Overview:
This is a great resource for those researching the history of educational media or for a nostalgic look back at 90s school curriculum. Please note that some medical or social terminology may have changed since this video was produced.
1991 language: “Boys have penises and testicles; girls have vaginas and ovaries.”
Updated language: “Most people assigned male at birth have testes and a penis; most assigned female have a uterus and ovaries. But intersex variations (e.g., XY with androgen insensitivity) occur in 1.7% of births – as common as red hair.” Subject: Resource Share - Puberty Sexual Education for
Updated include:
For boys:
For girls:
For all:
In 1991, these were often called STDs (sexually transmitted diseases). They include HIV, chlamydia, herpes, and others. The only way to be 100% safe from STIs is not to have sex. Using a condom lowers risk but does not remove it completely.
The original 1991 English29L curriculum was a product of its time: clinical, binary, and silent on pleasure, consent, or digital life. But it succeeded in one way: it normalized talking about puberty at all. Content Overview:
Your job now is to layer this update on top: