Puberty Sexual Education For Boys And Girls 1991 Belgium Exclusive -

To understand the landscape of 1991 Belgium is to understand a nation divided by language (Flemish vs. Walloon) but united by a pragmatic view of adolescence. This exclusive report dives into the original 1991 curricula, the "Rode Draad" (Red Thread) in Flanders, and the "EVRAS" (Education à la Vie Relationnelle, Affective et Sexuelle) precursors in French-speaking Wallonia. Unlike the moral panic sweeping the United States and the UK in the early 90s (think AIDS crisis hysteria and Section 28), Belgium in 1991 operated under a unique compromise. The state subsidized three educational networks: the official neutral state schools, the Catholic subsidized schools, and the communal schools.

For historians, the 1991 Belgian texts are a goldmine. They represent the last moment before the internet fragmented adolescence—a time when a classroom in Charleroi and a classroom in Ghent could agree, unequivocally, that puberty was normal, sex was healthy, and ignorance was the only real sin. To understand the landscape of 1991 Belgium is

In the autumn of 1991, as the world watched the Soviet Union collapse and the European Community formalize the Maastricht Treaty, a quieter revolution was taking place inside the classrooms of Belgium. While American teens were glued to Beverly Hills, 90210 and grunge rock was taking over, Belgian educators were quietly piloting one of Europe’s most progressive—yet exclusive—models of puberty and sexual education. Unlike the moral panic sweeping the United States