Evidence-based sex education is critical for youth wellbeing, yet Black girls receive low-quality school-based instruction. This study examines sex education experiences (content learned, perceived quality), environment (grade level, instruction amount), and state-level policies mandating curriculum. Young adult Black women (18-22 years; N = 415) completed a cross-sectional survey on 31 topics potentially covered in sex education and the perceived quality of their sex education. Fourteen topics were endorsed as 'discussed, a lot.' Topics learned and perceived quality differed by grade level and instruction amount; state mandates showed limited associations with topics learned or perceived quality. Policy implementation requires improvement.
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Aaliyah Gray
Shelly Sinclair
Mary Jo Trepka
American Journal of Sexuality Education
Boston University
Florida International University
Gender Studies
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Gray et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a76084c6e9836116a2d563 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15546128.2026.2621224