The internet has revolutionized the way we access information, including sexual education resources. Online portable resources offer a convenient, accessible, and comprehensive way to provide puberty sexual education to boys and girls.

Allow students to submit questions about dating, attraction, and emotional changes without fear of embarrassment. For Parents and Caregivers:

Educators and parents can guide youth through these early narratives by focusing on three core areas:

Teaching youth to express feelings without assigning blame (e.g., "I feel anxious when we don't talk for days," instead of "You always ignore me" ).

Notice the tone: No shame, no fear, no biology textbook jargon.

These resources aim to support educators, parents, and young people in understanding and navigating puberty and sexual development.

Why teaching young people about puberty is essential - Brook

Introduction In 1991 the Netherlands produced progressive, practical sexual education materials for young people. This blog post revisits that era’s approach to puberty education, highlighting its core messages, how materials were designed for portability and online adaptation today, and how educators can translate those lessons for modern classrooms or family conversations.

Young people learned about different types of relationships, the concept of consent, and the importance of mutual respect and communication in sexual relationships.

for different stages of puberty (early vs. late).

The film received a positive user review on IMDb, which called it a "perfect summary of key sex education in under an hour". The review praised the film for having no taboos and for presenting masturbation positively.

Given the digital age, making such educational content "online portable" allows for:

Acknowledge that intense feelings, infatuations, and heartbreaks are biologically real and deeply impactful, not just "phases" to be dismissed.