This is a starting place for teens to learn about sexuality issues. It's about how to Talk About Sex...and to help yourself feel good and stay healthy.
It's about knowing your goals, learning how to achieve them and how to get there.
It's all about making and keeping choices true to yourself.
Let's talk about how to express yourself and take care of yourself, all of yourself. Sex? Yes, sex is something we need to talk about before we do something about it. These pages can help.

Take Action! Government Website is Misinforming Your Parents
Have you got a personal question? Here's a list
of other organizations that have web sites designed to help answer your sexuality
questions.
Ask Beth
http://www.ppsp.org/askbeth/askbeth.html
Coalition for Positive Sexuality: Sex Ed for Teens
http://www.positive.org/Home/index.html
Go Ask Alice!
http://www.goaskalice.columbia.edu
iwannaknow.org
http://www.iwannaknow.org
Scarleteen
http://www.scarleteen.com
SEX, etc.
http://www.sxetc.org
Teenwire
http://www.teenwire.com
Hosted by teens for teens, teenwire.com radio covers a range of sexual health topics. To tune in, click on the banner above.
Want your questions answered or your comments to be heard? If so, e-mail twradio@ppfa.org. Once a month, their teen hosts and sexual health experts will address your most pressing sexuality-related questions.
Seventeen, SIECUS and SexEtc. Ask, What do 16-21-year-old Males think about Sex?
(click on link above to take the survey)
We know you have something to say about sex, so SIECUS asked for your thoughts and opinions. You could have written about any sexuality-related topic including:
- Sexuality Education. Why is it that adults in the United States can't seem to agree on what, if anything, teens should learn about sex in school?
- HIV/AIDS. What’s it like to be the first generation that has grown up in a world that always included HIV and AIDS?
- Sex Is Everywhere. How does it make you feel to live in world where the media tells you how you should look, what you should wear, and what is considered sexy?
Here’s what you had to say:
These articles are included in the April/May 2003 SIECUS Report, “Young People Talk About Sex”.