Sexuele Voorlichting Puberty Sexual Education For Boys And Girls 1991 English29l 2021 -

Who this is for: teens aged ~11–15. Short, inclusive, factual, and respectful.

What’s happening

Body changes (what to expect)

Periods & menstrual basics (for girls or people who menstruate)

Erections & wet dreams (for boys or people with a penis)

Consent & boundaries

Safe sex basics

Emotional health & relationships

Body image & diversity

Practical tips

Where to get help (examples to adapt locally)

Quick myth busters

One-line takeaway

If you want this adapted into a printed flyer, classroom slide deck, age-specific versions (11–13 vs 14–16), Dutch language, or with citations/resources tailored to a specific country/year, tell me which and I’ll produce it.


By 2021, the approach had shifted significantly towards what is known as "Comprehensive Sexuality Education" (CSE).

  • Integration: Boys and girls are increasingly taught together to foster mutual understanding and respect, rather than mystery.
  • In 2021, several factors caused a spike in searches for “1991 sexuele voorlichting”:

    By late 2021, several archives reported that “sexuele voorlichting 1991 english29l” was among the top 10 most-requested educational films.


    In 1991, sexual education in Western schools (including the Netherlands, implied by the Dutch term sexuele voorlichting) was largely characterized by a focus on biology and hygiene.

  • Tone: The approach was often clinical. Emphasis was placed on the dangers of unprotected sex, specifically the fear of HIV/AIDS, which was a major global health crisis at the time.
  • Gaps: Topics such as consent, pleasure, digital safety, and LGBTQ+ relationships were rarely discussed or were entirely absent from standard curriculums.
  • If you find a video matching this description from 1991, expect the following typical chapters: Who this is for: teens aged ~11–15

  • Girls:
  • Common to both:
  • Visual style: Soft lighting, neutral backgrounds (school locker rooms, doctor’s office, bedroom). The narrator speaks in calm, slow Dutch. In the “english29l” version, English subtitles or a dubbed voiceover is provided.


    When you type “sexuele voorlichting puberty sexual education for boys and girls 1991 english29l 2021” into a search bar, you’re not just looking for a video. You’re tapping into a global conversation about how societies teach (or fail to teach) young people about their changing bodies.

    The 1991 Dutch film, code “english29l,” became a 2021 cult educational artifact because it dares to show what most curricula hide: real puberty, real questions, and real respect for young people’s need for truth. As debates over sex ed rage on in school boards and parliaments, this 30-year-old VHS transfer remains a quiet, powerful reminder that honesty – even if awkward – is the best policy.


    Have you seen the “29l” version? Educators and researchers continue to catalog these historical materials. If you hold a copy, consider digitizing it for a public educational archive.

    I’m not fully certain which exact deliverable you want. I’ll assume you want a vibrant, modernized English-language sexual education overview (for boys and girls) that references/adapts material from a 1991-style pamphlet and updates it to 2021 tone — concise, age-appropriate, and suitable for classroom use. Here’s a single-page, structured lesson handout (readable, lively tone) you can drop into a booklet or slide.

    The fact that people in 2021 were actively searching for a 30-year-old Dutch puberty film says something profound: comprehensive sex education remains urgent and under-supplied worldwide. Body changes (what to expect)

    Dutch educators interviewed in 2021 noted that while the 1991 film is dated, its core philosophy – “knowledge dispels fear; honesty builds trust” – is timeless. Modern Dutch schools now use updated digital tools, but they still show snippets of the 1991 film to demonstrate how honest conversation about bodies has always been the norm.


    Between 1991 and 2021, research, technology, and social norms evolved dramatically. A "solid" sexual education for 2021 (and beyond) includes everything from 1991, plus the following critical pillars: