I agree that sexting should be a part of sexuality education. But who is educating teachers about how to teach about sexting? And is there enough focus on whether sexting can be good for teens who are just beginning to explore their sexuality?
Sex education needs to be more sophisticated
Sexuality education receives very little attention in teacher education courses and can often slip off agenda entirely because of the crowded curriculum.
Feedback from students tells us that there is too much repetition in sexuality education, with a lot of focus on biology and respect, but little discussion of the role of pleasure and how to negotiate sexual relationships.
We know that young Australians are sexting, but local research shows that young people are predominantly sexting within the contexts of an intimate relationship. Today's research found that 12% of participants had forwarded sexts without consent, however the majority of the time sexting is a consensual activity.
Teachers should also be aware that in digital spaces, young women aged 18–19 years old are more likely to encounter degrading comments about their gender, sexual harassment and unwanted sexual requests, according to a recent Australian survey.
We don't have the full picture
There are methodological challenges in researching something that adults call sexting, but that young people might not recognise as such. There are also challenges in gaining a decent sample of young people.
Online samples could over-report the incidence of sexting because young people who aren't sexting also aren't likely to participate in online surveys about sexting.
Meanwhile, samples using telephone recruitment are likely to under-report because young people are less likely to participate, or to talk honestly, about sexting while their parent or guardian is in the vicinity. In Australia, the permission of a parent or guardian is mandatory in research with young people under sixteen years of age.
Teens taking sex ed into their own hands
Since schools and parents can be poor at sexuality education, young people may indeed be in the best position to educate themselves and one another about sexuality – including sexting.
In the age of #metoo we increasingly see young people taking education about sexuality and sexual harassment into their own hands. Young women are responding to online sexual harassment in ways that poke fun at their harassers, but these tactics are not without consequences.
For example, Anna Gensler is a an illustrator who posted satirical illustrations on Instagram calling out sexual harassment she encountered online. As a consequence, she became the target of a stalker.
More and better dialogue
In Australia and the UK, researchers have urged the need for more public conversations about social media as spaces of courtship and sexual exchange for youth beyond boundaries of the schoolyard.
With my colleague Louisa Allen, I have argued that sexuality education needs to focus much more helping young people to imagine and participate in conversations related to sexuality, both within and outside the school context. It seems that the authors of the review published today concur with us on this point.
We should be encouraging young people to think about the etiquette of sexting and why young women often experience more harm as a result of it.
The answer is not to tell young people that they should not sext, but rather to engage them in thinking, with each other, about sexting as part of the broader negotiation of intimate relationships.
• Mary Lou Rasmussen, Professor, School of Sociology, Australian National University
• This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.