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savafan
11-06-2005, 12:42 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/05/AR2005110501414_pf.html

By Tara Bahrampour and Ian Shapira
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, November 6, 2005; C01



Perhaps the most shocking thing about students having sex in a high school auditorium was that other students didn't find it very shocking at all.

"I glanced over and, whatever, I just let him continue on with his business," said a 16-year-old linebacker on the Osbourn High School football team who, along with a friend, stumbled upon a couple engaging in oral sex. "I stayed for five to eight minutes, just talking. We weren't worried about it. When the janitor came in, everyone started running."

Manassas school officials weren't as laid back. The students -- eight in all -- were quickly identified and suspended, and the matter prompted the small school system to confront an issue many adults would rather not face: in this case, two girls and three boys engaging in oral sex or intercourse on school property while three other boys watched, according to sources familiar with what happened.

"In all the years that I've been in education, I've never run into this one before," said John Boronkay, the school system's acting superintendent. "It's a new one."

Actually, it's not so new. According to some teenagers, sex on school property is more frequent than adults might imagine. And some adults who work with teenagers said it's happening more often these days.

There's anecdotal evidence to support that:

Two students were discovered recently having sex in an Anne Arundel County high school gym. Four students at Col. Zadok Magruder High in Rockville were arrested in June after performing sex acts in the school parking lot. A boy and a girl at Springbrook High in Silver Spring were caught "touching inappropriately" in a school bathroom. Last year, three teenage boys at Mount Hebron High in Howard County were arrested after a student accused them of sexually assaulting her in a school restroom, but charges were dropped after the boys said the sex was consensual and the girl recanted.

"Students would have intercourse on the stairwells, locked classrooms, in the locker rooms," said Ihsan Musawwir, 18, a recent graduate of Dunbar Senior High School in the District. "It was embarrassing for me to walk in on it."

Jessica Miller, 19, who graduated in June from T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, said that for some students there, sex on campus is a popular fantasy -- and sometimes a reality -- particularly in the auditorium.

"It's so big, it's so dark," Miller said. "There's a lot more places to find privacy -- behind the stage and on the catwalk."

But what's the appeal? "Just being rebellious," she said. "Coming back to class and saying, 'Ooh, guess what I just did? I just had sex in the auditorium.' "

Deborah Roffman, a Baltimore-based sexuality educator, said she has been hearing more about similar occurrences in the past five years. "Schools are calling me, asking, 'What do we do? We've had this incident at our school.' "

The fact that teenagers have sex is well established: Roughly half of all 15- to 19-year-olds have had vaginal intercourse, and more than half have had oral sex, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But getting a handle on the reasons students are emboldened to risk having sex at school is as tricky as figuring out how many are doing it. Musawwir, the Dunbar graduate, who has helped lead teen forums on sex, said she thinks students have sex in school because they have nowhere else to go. "And it's the thrill of getting caught or not. And the media has a lot of things to do with it. They think that if they see it on TV, they can get away with it in real life."

For example, the popular movie "Mean Girls" -- a comedy about clique warfare in high school -- showed a girl in a bra and skirt making out with a guy in briefs in the school auditorium's projection room.

Cpl. Michael Rudinski, president of the Maryland Association of School Resource Officers, said teenagers do whatever they think their peers are doing, whether they are or not. "The thing about young people is when they see things in the mass media and they think it's going on, they start doing it."

A 16-year-old who said she is friends with one of the girls at Osbourn who was suspended said the episode wasn't surprising. "It wasn't that big of a deal," she said. But she said her friend "regrets what she did. She knows it wasn't a smart thing to do. But everybody whispering about her doesn't help."

Not all teenagers accept such incidents as "no big deal." A few nights after the Osbourn news broke, students from T.C. Williams, standing in a drizzle to cheer on a girls field hockey game, pronounced it "weird" and "embarrassing."

"What do you call it -- orgies?" 17-year-old senior Emilie Jackson said, giggling as she tried to come up with the word. "They don't happen. That's not normal teenage behavior."

"I would just wonder, like, what's going through their heads -- like, 'Okay, guys, let's meet at 3:30 behind the curtain?' " she said.

It can be hard to police everything that goes on at school, especially after hours, when club meetings, sports practices and rehearsals take place. In many schools, hall monitors and other adults stay late to make sure students are there for legitimate reasons.

But even adults do not always know how to handle the sex issue. An Anne Arundel teacher said he found two students having sex last year on the wrestling mats in a high school auxiliary gym. The teacher, who declined to be named, said he didn't report the couple because he was worried about repercussions for them -- or himself.

"I've seen and heard situations when you don't have support. These stories come back and kick you in the face," said the teacher, who is in his thirties.

He said he doesn't think an adult's word is worth as much as it used to be. "Kids have a voice or whatever, which is great, but at the same time, you see [teachers] who step up and say something and they get mashed."

Many schools don't have rules specifically banning sex on campus but punish students who do it through a clause prohibiting "immoral conduct" or behavior that offends the community's morals, said Naomi Gittins, a staff attorney at the National School Boards Association. Gittins added that more specific policies would make it easier for schools to defend themselves against legal challenges.

After the janitor reported the Sept. 28 incident at Osbourn High, school officials checked security cameras and identified eight students who had entered the auditorium. The three who watched were suspended for five days; the others for 10. One of the two girls claimed she was coerced, but police did not find enough evidence to file charges.

School administrators are drafting a rule that bans sex on school property.

Some students at Osbourn noted a double standard among their schoolmates, saying the girls involved were being called "****s" and "*****s" while the boys faced censure mostly because some felt they had jeopardized the football team.

"I don't think any of the guys [in school] really admired any of the people involved," said Tim Blank, 18, a senior on the Osbourn football team and an editor on the school paper. He said his teammates were angry with the male participants, all of whom were on the team, because they were top players and their suspensions threatened the season.

"We had gone through three years of hard times, [and] we finally got off to a hot start," Blank said.

Parents complained that they did not hear from the Manassas School Board about the auditorium incident until nearly three weeks later in a letter.

"I was waiting for some type of communication from the school," said Cindy Brookshire, 51, a parent who heard about the incident from her son. "Nothing came out except rumors."

Arthur P. Bushnell, the School Board chairman, said board members waited to inform parents until it was clear what the punishments would be.

Some parents said the matter got them talking to their children in discussions they might not have at Osbourn, where, according to the school system's director of instructional services, Sandy Thompson, health classes focus on abstinence and sexually transmitted diseases but not condoms or contraception.

Miller, the T.C. Williams graduate, said she didn't understand why adults were so shocked. "Our parents are the ones who had the sexual revolution, so why are they surprised?"

Parents at Osbourn said what happened in the auditorium went far beyond their own teenage activities, and some added that they were confident that their children would not get involved in such an incident.

"Maybe I'm a naive parent," said Ted Hauffe, whose son, Daniel, is on the football team, "but I will say my kid would never participate" in group sex.

As to warning teenagers off sex, he said, "You can preach that as a parent, and hopefully they will listen to you, but when it comes to that particular moment of passion, what are you going to do?"

Blank's father, Bryan Blank, said that compared with when he was young, "Society is more open. You see two women kissing on MTV. You have things talked about, like 'straight versus gay.' "

Asked whether the incident related to any cultural trend or had any deeper meaning, a group of boys watching the T.C. Williams field hockey game scoffed. "It means there's eight weirdos around," said Alex Haitsuka,17, a junior.

"I'd become very unaroused" at the sight, he added. "Nine hundred out of 901 people would not want to be involved."

Matt Killeen, 18, a senior, said he also found it shocking.

"Can't you just wait till you're at home?" he asked.

Staff writers Maria Glod, Daniel Lyght, Theola S. Labbe and Ylan Mui and researcher Magda Jean-Louis contributed to this report.

GAC
11-07-2005, 09:15 AM
Geez! What kind of school is this? Don't they have teachers monitoring the halls and study areas? Or are they all in the teacher's lounge getting their nicotine fix? ;)

In my kid's school, you have only have a few minutes in order to get to your next class. And you had better not be caught in the halls or anywhere else without a teacher pass.

And the study hall and other areas utilized for such are monitored by teachers or teacher's aids (another adult).

traderumor
11-07-2005, 10:17 AM
Instead of back seats of cars...

savafan
11-07-2005, 10:25 AM
I remember it happening in the library and the auditorium when I was in school

Johnny Footstool
11-07-2005, 12:01 PM
My friend teaches in a low-income school district, and he has caught a few kids doing the nasty. He said it happens pretty frequently.

smith288
11-07-2005, 12:11 PM
Bunch of man-slu#s and *****s.

Dear Lord, let me be a beneficial leader for my children in educating them in the ways of personal responsibility and not falling to the temptations of whoring in high school (or middle school for that matter).

GAC
11-07-2005, 09:17 PM
My friend teaches in a low-income school district, and he has caught a few kids doing the nasty. He said it happens pretty frequently.

I agree Johnny. But what is the solution? If they know it is a problem, then what are they doing to find a resolution, or are they just throwing their hands in the air in frustration?

Johnny Footstool
11-07-2005, 11:36 PM
I agree Johnny. But what is the solution? If they know it is a problem, then what are they doing to find a resolution, or are they just throwing their hands in the air in frustration?

From what he tells me, they're suspending the people they catch, but that's about it.

Unfortunately, for most of the kids in this school, a suspension is not a big deal. Their parents don't really care.

GAC
11-08-2005, 09:25 AM
From what he tells me, they're suspending the people they catch, but that's about it.

Unfortunately, for most of the kids in this school, a suspension is not a big deal. Their parents don't really care.

And you hit the nail of the proverbial head there - their parents don't care. They don't care about this activity, and they probably don't care if they are in school or not. And I wonder how many of these kids are from single parent homes (Mom only)?

Chip R
11-08-2005, 09:50 AM
Geez! What kind of school is this? Don't they have teachers monitoring the halls and study areas? Or are they all in the teacher's lounge getting their nicotine fix? ;)


I know when I was in high school, I was in choir and since we were about the only guys in the choir my buddy and I would just go in the band room and he'd practice his guitar and stuff while the girls worked on their songs. When we were doing a play we'd hang around backstage in the lofts and stuff when we didn't have to work with the lighting. So even in the smaller schools, there are opportunities for that sort of thing.

Johnny Footstool
11-08-2005, 09:56 AM
And I wonder how many of these kids are from single parent homes (Mom only)?

Surprisingly, my friend says that the single-mom households actually tend to have more discipline. Working moms don't like to get called in from work in order to have a conference with the principal, so they tend to actually punish their kids more than two-parent households. At least that's his observation.

GAC
11-09-2005, 08:07 AM
I was listening to my wife giving our two teens the devil last night about doing the dishes and folding the clothes. I let her go on for about 10 minutes because she was on a roll. I didn't have the heart to tell her that the kids had headphones on and didn't hear a word she said. :lol:

OldRightHander
11-10-2005, 10:20 AM
I was listening to my wife giving our two teens the devil last night about doing the dishes and folding the clothes. I let her go on for about 10 minutes because she was on a roll. I didn't have the heart to tell her that the kids had headphones on and didn't hear a word she said. :lol:

I honestly don't think it matters. Women have to rant about that kind of stuff, whether anyone is listening or not. It makes them feel better, kind of like therapy.

Yachtzee
11-10-2005, 06:21 PM
Kids these days! They could at least have the decency to save it for Makeout Point or the Drive-in. Sheesh!

Matt700wlw
11-10-2005, 07:23 PM
They should give out condoms. If it's going to happen anyway, they may as well promote safety.

:D

M2
11-13-2005, 02:50 AM
I'm twenty years out of high school, but people did it everywhere back then too. Under the bleachers, in the band room, backstage in the auditorium, in the lighting room at the auditorium, in the media room at the library, in the "broadcast booth" at the football field, in the weight room, in various bathrooms and classrooms, in locker rooms, in equipment rooms, in the parking lot, in the courtyard and out along the cross country course. Having procured a master key and license to roam the halls freely during my study halls, I preferred the planetarium room, which sat vacant all year long and had double-reinforced walls.

The only thing that shocks me is that people somehow still manage to register shock over teenage sex. For more than 30 years we've known that the overwhelming majority of high schoolers don't make it to graduation as virgins. I mean, what are parents up in arms about? Oh my, they're having sex ... just like we did?

GAC
11-13-2005, 05:22 AM
I disagree...concerning the statement that an overwhelming majority of our teens didn't make it to graduation as virgins. 30-40 years ago, yes, there were teens having sex. But it was not at, or near the levels that we are seeing today. Not even close.

There was alot more bragging back then by the guys, then actual sex going on. :laugh:

Because if there was as much sex going on back then, as there is now among our teens in school, then why was there not the problem (and statistics) with STDs, and unwanted pregnancies?

I'm not saying that teens back then, such as myself, were puritans either. But I went to a city school with a graduating class of 300. In my 4 years of high school (and everyone knew who/what was going on), there was one instance of a girl getting pregnant (cheerleader by the QB). It caused such a stir because she was white and he was black, and she was kicked off the cheerleading squad and suspended... and no action was taken against him.

And even if it was going on at the levels we are seeing now, which again I don't believe, it doesn't make it right, or that parents shouldn't be concerned, or that school systems shouldn't be taking measures to prevent it. It is all about education concerning the risks, and protecting our children. Not looking the other way. Or saying with a "shoulder shrug" - kids are going to do it anyway.