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Sex Education
Sexuality, Society and Learning
Volume 3, 2003 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

What Does Puberty Mean to Adolescents? Teaching and learning about bodily development

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Pages 119-131 | Published online: 25 Aug 2010

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Read on this site (6)

JulietteD. G. Goldman & LisaE. McCutchen. (2012) Teenagers’ web questions compared with a sexuality curriculum: an exploration. Educational Research 54:4, pages 357-373.
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JosephA. Diorio. (2006) Schools as Sites for Constructing Minority Sexual Orientations. Journal of Gay & Lesbian Issues in Education 3:2-3, pages 103-110.
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JenniferK. Harrison. (2005) Science Education and Health Education: Locating the Connections. Studies in Science Education 41:1, pages 51-90.
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Articles from other publishers (7)

J. Dennis Fortenberry & Devon J. Hensel. 2022. Gender and Sexuality Development. Gender and Sexuality Development 357 384 .
Shire Agnew & Alexandra C Gunn. (2019) Students’ engagement with alternative discursive construction of menstruation. Health Education Journal 78:6, pages 670-680.
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Lisa J. Crockett, Julianna Deardorff, Megan Johnson, Charles Irwin & Anne C. Petersen. (2019) Puberty Education in a Global Context: Knowledge Gaps, Opportunities, and Implications for Policy. Journal of Research on Adolescence 29:1, pages 177-195.
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Markus Lindholm. (2018) Promoting Curiosity?. Science & Education 27:9-10, pages 987-1002.
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Katherine A. Lyon & Hélène Frohard-Dourlent. (2015) “Let's Talk about the Institution”: Same-Sex Common-Law Partners Negotiating Marriage Equality and Relationship Legitimacy. Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 52:4, pages 402-428.
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Sarah H. Smith. (2012) Reading Sociology into Scholarship on School‐Based Sex Education: Interaction and Culture. Sociology Compass 6:7, pages 526-540.
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Deborah Schooler, Janna L. Kim & Lynn Sorsoli. (2006) Setting rules or sitting down: Parental mediation of television consumption and adolescent self-esteem, body image, and sexuality. Sexuality Research and Social Policy 3:4, pages 49-62.
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