Coalition member Texas Freedom Network provides a great opportunity for young people to get involved!
TFN's Youth Summer Summit is June 12 & 13 in Austin, Texas
Education Works member organization Texas Freedom Network (TFN), in partnership with Advocates for Youth, is seeking passionate youth activists to attend a Youth Summer Summit! Participants will learn about the history of sexuality education in Texas, School Health Advisory Councils (SHACs), and how these councils allow young people to influence sexuality education policies at the local level.
Young people across Texas (ages 15-24) are also invited to join TFN’s Youth Leadership Council collaborate with the YLC to create an action plan for year two of the campaign. The Texas Youth Leadership Council is composed of ten dynamic high school and college students across the state who support and promote evidence-based, comprehensive sex education. All participants will have the opportunity to practice what they learned in the real world in conjunction with the YLC.
Attendees will learn how to advocate for responsible sexuality education, raise awareness among youth about the need for responsible sexuality education in Texas public schools, and empower other youth to get involved in their communities. Interested young people can apply online at www.tfn.org/youth_summer_summit.
Providing a great example of effective grassroots advocacy, parents and students in Pittsburgh, PA, successfully convinced their school board to change the district's policy from abstinence-only to comprehensive sex education. Terri Klein, one of the organizers of the group, shares the full story in a great blog post.
What worked for them:
- Educating other parents about the abstinence-only information being taught, which motivated them to advocate for change
- Working within the system - they organized a group of parents and students to testify at a school board hearing
- Using new media to allow people to be virtual activists - they started an online petition that garnered over 750 signatures
- Working with students to raise awareness and recruit more supporters
- Leveraging news and current events, like Pennsylvania's recent rise in teen pregnancies, to get media coverage and increase support


The 2009 REACH Summit was underwritten by the University of Texas Prevention Research Center and co-sponsored by Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans, Baylor College of Medicine Teen Health Clinic, ChildBuilders, the Council on Alcohol and Drugs, Communities in Schools, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, One Voice, Planned Parenthood of Houston Southeast Texas, and the YWCA. Many thanks to these organizations for their role in helping the Summit become a reality!