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To help parents learn how to talk to their kids about sex-adjacent topics without losing their cool, there’s a new online video series called Amaze Jr.
At the end of the day, sexual health information is health care, and young people should be learning about sex in an environment that does not double down on stigma but rather makes them feel supported, affirmed, and equipped to lead healthy lives.
AMAZE’s YouTube series gives kids sex education, along with some fun.
Children should be taught about consent from a very young age, even if they are not old enough to learn about it in the context of sex.
Amaze.org - a website created to give real information about sex and puberty in a less awkward and more digestible way -- what we should be saying to our kids, and when. Listen to every second of this episode because it is full of real information parents will need, will use, and will relate to.
Today we hear from a sex educator who faces challenges in these communities to bring in the necessary resources to support change through comprehensive, honest, sex ed. We hear how race does play a role.
WATCH: “Sexuality is not negative” — Sex education advocate stresses importance of being open to information about sexuality
AMAZE's most, well, amazing feature is that it offers free, credible information, thus removing a huge financial barrier for educators.
Amaze.org [is] a nonprofit partnership that aims to make sex ed engaging, informative and less weird for young adolescents.
To Save Sex Education Under Trump, Amaze.org Is Turning to New Media. The organization has taken a digital-first approach to providing America's youth with sex education.
The latest and perhaps most inventive yet is AMAZE, an online library of short, funny sex education videos geared toward teaching middle schoolers about puberty, gender identity, sexual orientation, and healthy relationships.
Advocates for Youth...has supplemented traditional sex ed programs with a series of videos called AMAZE for kids aged 10 to 14, on everything from puberty to porn.
AMAZE is a series of sex-education videos aimed at younger adolescents (those 10 to 14), an age group that’s often overlooked by programs focusing on older teens who are already having sex or likely to have sex soon.
AMAZE is serving as a true trailblazer for reforming American sex education.
In 2008, the United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha County launched an initiative to lower Milwaukee's high rate of teen childbirths.
When adults are silent about sex and sexuality, they leave a massive vacuum for young people…Kids and teens fill that vacuum with what they hear from their friends and what they stumble on online. If they think sex and sexuality is a topic they can’t ask about, they think it’s a topic where they have to make up information.
Having the sex talk with your kids is the last thing many parents want to do – they're worried about what to say, how much to say, and when to introduce the subject. But one organization is trying to take the fear out of 'the talk.'
When the AMAZE initiative launched in September 2016, the goal was to provide comprehensive sex ed videos to children between the ages of 10 and 14. The short, animated videos are accessible and age-appropriate — and they prove that it’s never too early to start talking with children about consent.
AMAZE may be here to rescue or sex ed dilemma in this nation. With the news that some communities only teach abstinence and hard telling what they say or are allowed to mention about the LGBT community, many students go to the internet.
AMAZE.org is putting the power in the hands of parents with their amazing videos aimed at teaching kids all about sex, their bodies, consent, and more… Basically, any question your preschooler could possibly ask about sex, they’ve got a video to address it!
Overall, there has been a surge of new HIV diagnoses in people between 13 and 24 of all orientations, genders, and races. Following the release the statistics, AMAZE decided to release a new video that schools young people on HIV prevention and treatment.
AMAZE is a sex education video series for children ages 10 to 14. It hopes to bring a more modern, kid-friendly face to lessons that can be, best-case scenario, awkward and uncomfortable. Launched last September, AMAZE covers traditional topics like puberty and masturbation, along with more progressive topics.
This Staples High School junior’s video called “Wise on the Web” was selected to be featured on the national platform of AMAZE.org.
I was a little squeamish to talk about these subjects with my daughter. So I was delighted to find out that AMAZE — a collaboration between Advocates for Youth, Answer, and Youth Tech Health — created an online sex education resource for young adolescents.
The sex ed they do get from their schools is oftentimes outdated, patronizing, and ignorant of modern-day realities like sexting and same-sex relationships. A new YouTube series called AMAZE is hoping to change that.
Bushwick High Schoolers Film Award-Winning Sex Ed Video. The video, which won the AMAZE young animator contest, talks candidly about sex in a way young people will want to digest.
Amaze.org, dirigido a los adolescentes, explica la sexualidad con ilustraciones y animación para que padres e hijos resuelvan sus dudas.

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