Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational Knowledge - How old can children have sex education?
How old can children have sex education?
Parents don't need to take the initiative to have sex education until their children are 6 years old. They can adopt the principle of answering whatever the child has. In the process of answering, you should answer in a language that children can understand, so that children can correctly understand some sexual knowledge. If parents always avoid their children's questions and answers, they will make their children more curious, and even some parents will easily misunderstand their children's sex education. So, is it better to have sex education for children as soon as possible? Let's find out.

Steps/methods:

1 The earlier sex education for children, the better. For children's sex education, parents should take the initiative to carry out sex education before the age of 6, instead of guessing their children's world and understanding ability with adult thinking. Sex education for children should start from birth, and it is always inseparable from moral education.

Generally speaking, children will take the initiative to ask questions related to sex when they are two or three years old, so the earlier sex education for children, the better. Two or three years old is also the best time to give sex education to children. Therefore, parents should choose the best age for sex education for their children.

Parents should educate their children about sex as soon as possible. Parents of younger children don't need to explain some difficult emotional problems in depth. They can explain in the simplest words that children can understand, just like answering other daily questions, and let them eliminate this curiosity.

Matters needing attention

I hope parents can attach great importance to their children's sex education. Even if the child is still young, we should pay attention to the sex education of the child, which can make the child grow up healthily. Moreover, parents always have to answer some questions they don't understand in the right way, which may lead them to form negative judgments and think that sex-related questions are bad and shameful.