I'll post it if there's any interest, but in summary, the bill was aimed at doing away with abstinence or abstinence-plus education, replacing it with CSE- comprehensive sexual education.
While it'd still be stressed that abstinence is the only surefire way to stay safe from pregnancy, STIs, related emotional trauma, the approach would not be what it is now-- shaming, scaring, and sometimes skewing facts to keep people away from sex.\
Studies show that areas with abstinence-only education have a SIGNIFICANTLY higher teen pregnancy rate... because they were never taught how to protect themselves.
While I can't speak for all of Virginia's schools, I was lucky to be born in an abstinence-plus area... but they still tried all the old scare tactics, told girls they don't want to be like "that", and only spent ONE WEEK out of an ENTIRE QUARTER on contraceptives... Throw some scary anecdotal information this way and that, then barely touch on how to protect yourself from it?
Mind you our weekly schedule goes odd/even/odd/even/odd, even/odd/even/odd/even... that one week was a grand total 2 days. An hour and a half of class. 3 hours out of the entire course dedicated to contraceptives.
So with this knowledge, I did some research which, obviously, completely demolished the idea behind abstinence education, and many of the myths-- ("if we teach kids what sex is, they'll want to have it!"... they're obviously doing it anyways, and shouldn't they be prepared?) and my bill ended up doing very well C: