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May 29, 2005

Attention Students! Your Proctor Today is Procter & Gamble

pglogo.gifThe New York Times had a fine article today on Procter & Gamble's sponsored sex "education" materials, which are used by 85% of all fifth grade classrooms in the United States. Of course, the P&G "curriculum" comes with product samples: Old Spice antiperspirant for boys, and Secret antipersirant with some Always pads for girls.

The "curriculum" is full of enlightening "lessons," such as "I used to be really worried about sweating a lot, but since I started using an antiperspirant every morning, I'm dry all day.''

Here's today's New York Times article.

Sex Ed, Provided By Old Spice
by Marek Fuchs

In the spring, county schools generally start preparing fifth graders for the transition to adulthood. In many districts, there are middle-school orientation visits, and there is also a preliminary birds-and-bees talk.

Many of us may have squeamish memories of our schools' efforts at enlightening us about our soon-to-dawn sexuality. I remember being part of a crowd herded into the auditorium at the H.C. Crittenden in Armonk to watch a grainy film. I was seated next to a girl I had a wild crush on, and as the earnest narrator touched upon the subject of sweat glands, I nearly spontaneously combusted with embarrassment.

Embarrassment is part of the experience, perhaps inevitably; but in many Westchester schools -- indeed, at 85 percent of the fifth-grade classrooms in the nation -- Procter & Gamble is, too. At least, that's the figure according to Michelle Vaeth, a spokeswoman, who verified that the company provides an education package with reading material, a video and product samples: an Old Spice stick for the boys, and a Secret stick plus Always pads for the girls.

The title of the package is ''Always Changing: About You,'' and the subtitle is ''Puberty and Stuff.''

Here's a sample of the content, from Page 13 of the pamphlet: ''I used to be really worried about sweating a lot, but since I started using an antiperspirant every morning, I'm dry all day.''

How best to advise fifth graders on sweating is debatable. But when the adviser is a consumer-product behemoth trading educational material for access to a captive audience, well, that occasions second thoughts.

''It's just wrong to use compulsory-attendance laws to compel students to review ads,'' said Gary Ruskin, the executive director of Commercial Alert, a watchdog group based in Portland, Ore. ''A school's mission is to teach children to read, write, add and think. Not to shop.''

The first real outcry against what many parents perceived as a commercial incursion into the classroom came 15 years ago when Channel One, the Chris Whittle creation, installed televisions in schools to deliver news in exchange for advertisements. Supporters said the commercials were merely bankrolling the content and asserted that children were hardly naifs living in a commercial vacuum. But many others were using terms like ''devil's bargain.''

Over the years, the deals have kept coming, with progressively less fuss: advertisements on gymnasium scoreboards and wrapping paper for textbooks; pacts to vend a particular brand of soda; even signage on the roofs of schools near airports, said William Chipps of the International Events Group Sponsorship Report, a trade publication that addresses sponsorship issues.

''It's just happening more and more in schools, given the budget shortfalls,'' Mr. Chipps said.

But even parents who have witnessed this trend disapprovingly probably hadn't anticipated Procter & Gamble's pushing product samples while holding forth to fifth graders on sweat glands.

Most of the ''lesson plan'' is pretty tame. Aside from the product handouts, there's not much you wouldn't see elsewhere. That is all the more reason, Mr. Ruskin argued, to eliminate Procter & Gamble's involvement. ''There's nothing in the P&G material that couldn't be done without the commercial content,'' he said.

The company says it is merely trying to help itself while also helping the community. It has never pushed the program into schools, Ms. Vaeth added; it has merely accommodated the many schools that have signed up. And with limited resources and teachers who already juggle course material on different subjects, she said, a ready-made package comes in handy.

Kelly Adams, who teaches middle schoolers health and physical education in Briarcliff, says she doesn't see the harm in having a corporate source; students are so used to being bombarded by ads and fads that they will not become lifelong Old Spice users just because they are given a free stick.

But Mr. Ruskin says that's not the point. ''At school, children are taught to obey,'' he said. ''So anytime the authority of the school is harnessed, it can be very influential.'' In this case, he sees the corporate sponsor as too easily preying on children's insecurities -- whether about menstruation or perspiration -- for financial gain.

''There is a special vulnerability in discussions about uncomfortable subjects at times -- like fifth grade -- when students are so impressionable,'' is how he put it. ''That's the principal reason why corporations love corporate indentured education.''

Posted by Gary Ruskin at May 29, 2005 04:24 PM

Comments

Children are bombarded by ads everywhere they go these days. None of this should be allowed in the public schools and kids are so very impressionable. Please carry on the fight against these practices.
Sorry I cannot contribute as I live on a very fixed income but am tuned in to all the playing with our minds and most especially with youngsters. There's nowhere to hide from all these ruthless company practices.

Posted by: Selma Moss at June 4, 2005 06:41 PM

Excellent insight on this chaotic machine of subliminal inertia and mind control.

Posted by: George at June 4, 2005 07:55 PM

The corporations need to get out of our classrooms! Children seeing ads everywhere else is a lame excuse for exposing them to more. That argument reminds me of a story I read earlier this week regarding Ted Turner's comments on the direction of CNN. Turner said that CNN needs to focus on hard news instead of the constant celebrity news and soft features on all the other news networks. Christiane Amanpour challenged Mr. Turner by saying that because all the networks do this type of coverage, it is alright for CNN as well. Turner replied saying that CNN can rise above that and set a shining example for all the other networks to follow. In other words, CNN does not have to stoop down to the level of all the other networks, just as schools do not have to accept advertising simply because "children are exposed to so much advertising anyhow".

Story at --> http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory?id=810916

CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour, said: "But everyone else is doing that. Why do you think it's important not to?"

Quotable - "Turner replied: "Somebody's got to be a serious news person. Somebody's got to be the most respected name in television news, and I wanted that position for CNN."

Posted by: Ken M. McNatt at June 5, 2005 06:43 AM

Ok, so does this rep from P&G seriously think we're going to buy that tripe about how this advertising isn't going to have any affect on our kids? Well Ms. Vaeth, if that's so, then leave the product samples out. Uh-huh, that's what I thought. As if it's not bad enough that our schools are being corporate sponsored, but by a company like P&G? Tragic. The only thing we can do is educate our children even more at home, and hope they can see past the propaganda. We all need to work harder to get these corporations out of our schools.

Posted by: Amanda at June 7, 2005 09:53 AM

I just saw the movie Mr. and Mrs Smith and near the end of the film there is a shoot out in a warehouse sized store. The store sign is gigantic and lit up, Home Made, but the real clincher is when Brad Pit declares inside the show room, "This is a great store". I read about script ad placements but this was the first I'd seen. I couldn't take the rest of the movie and left, politely explainig why to the manager.

Posted by: art kraft at June 14, 2005 10:39 PM

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