Time for change? Personal, social and health education
This report evaluates the current PSHE curriculum: whether it is based sufficiently closely on the needs of young people and how the outcomes might be best achieved.
This report evaluates the current PSHE curriculum: whether it is based sufficiently closely on the needs of young people and how the outcomes might be best achieved.
In the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, U.S. Congress authorized a scientific evaluation of the Title V, Section 510 Abstinence Education Program. This report presents final results from a multi-year, experimentally-based impact study conducted as part of this evaluation.
Between January and June 2006, the Ministry of Education, supported by UNICEF and the Global Fund through the Ministry of Health, conducted the delivery of a pilot curriculum for Health and Family Life Education [HFLE] in 21 of 24 selected schools.
Sex and HIV Education Programs for Youth: Their Impact and Important Characteristics is a review document developed by D. Kirby, B. A Laris and L.
This report consists of a presentation of health and family life education (HFLE) policies and programmes in Carribean.
El "Proyecto Impulsa" ha realizado una serie de talleres dirigido a colegios del cono Norte de Lima, cuyo objetivo es evaluar la estrategia de transmitir la información más importante sobre VIH-SIDA a través de líderes escolares del 3er año de secundaria.
A partir de importantes cambios sociales y culturales que se han producido en Chile en los últimos 10 años, y de la necesidad de evaluar las acciones y logros obtenidos por el Ministerio de Educación en el tema de la educación sexual a una década de la publicación de la Política de Educación en S
Presentación de los programas y proyectos apoyados por el UNFPA acerca de salud sexual y reproductiva de los jóvenes.
Abstinence Only vs. Comprehensive Sex Education: What are the arguments? What is the evidence? is a document focusing on the impact of abstinence and comprehensive sex education programs established in United States.
This paper reports on programs that have helped young people in developing countries practise healthier behaviours, including delaying sexual debut, reducing the number of sexual partners, and increasing the use of methods of preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), includ