Puberty+sexual+education+for+boys+and+girls+1991+english46+link
The “46” in your search string likely refers to one of three things:
While I cannot supply a direct video file, archive.org and the Prelinger Archives hold several sex ed films from exactly 1989–1992. Search for “Puberty: A Girl’s Story” (1991) or “Boys and Puberty” (1990). The “46” in your search string likely refers
| Title | Format | Target | Approximate 1991 “Link” | |-------|--------|--------|----------------------------| | “What’s Happening to Me?” (Peter Mayle) | Illustrated book | Boys & girls separately | Available at B. Dalton or Waldenbooks | | “Where Did I Come From?” (Peter Mayle) | Book | Ages 4–10 | Library HQ612.6 | | “The Boy’s Body Book” (Kelli Dunham) – later ed. | Book | Boys | 1991 edition out of print | | “It’s Perfectly Normal” (Robie H. Harris) – published 1994 | Book | Boys & girls (post-1991) | Not available yet | | “Changes: You and Your Body” (PBS/NPR broadcast) | VHS/Radio | Co-ed | Educational TV guide listing | | “Dear Abby” and Ann Landers columns | Newspaper | Parents & teens | Syndicated columns, April–May 1991 | While I cannot supply a direct video file, archive
For a true 1991 link in the sense of a physical resource: “English46” in your keyword may refer to a
“English46” in your keyword may refer to a classroom video catalog code or a school district curriculum identifier (e.g., English 4–6 grade puberty unit). Some districts used codes like “HE46” for health education video #46 — that video might have been “Puberty: A Boy’s/Girl’s View” (1991, Films for the Humanities).
The year 1991 was a transitional moment in sexual education, particularly in English-speaking countries like the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. The AIDS epidemic was in its second decade, and fears about teen pregnancy, STDs, and the need for clear puberty information were reshaping how schools and parents talked to children about growing up.
Unlike today’s digital abundance of videos, apps, and online courses, 1991 relied on printed booklets, VHS tapes, classroom lectures, and a few pioneering CD-ROMs. For boys and girls, education was often still divided — sometimes by necessity, sometimes by outdated tradition.