Truthwillsetufree
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A little O/T, but my oldest took a family/homemaking elective during her freshman year. One of the projects/test was taking home one of those "real" babies. It came with a car seat, 2 diapers, and a bottle. It was programmed to cry and to respond to various things at various times...and sometimes couldn't be comforted at all except by holding and rocking it. It also has a computer chip in it that would record how long the baby was left unattended, whether the baby was abused (shaken), etc.
Well, her's was accidentally programmed on the highest setting. I was determined to make her take care of the baby all night by herself. At 2:30 a.m. the baby was programmed to only respond to the rocking and cradling to stop the crying. My daughter was in her room rocking and crying with the baby. She was so frustrated and so tired.
When I took her to school the next morning, we had a talk about it. She was very tired and VERY happy to be bringing her baby back to school. She said it was one of the hardest nights of her life. It was a real eye-opener.
I'm going to have my youngest do this project as well.
In fact, I think EVERY high school student, both boys and girls, should be required to do it.
There was/is a program like that here, not sure if it is still going but the students had to keep the baby for a week and depending on the care they gave the baby determined if they would pass or fail. It was/is a good program and should be a requirement in every high school. JMO but I think that one week was the best "birth control" information that a high school student could receive.