• Physical health and hygiene--body systems (1)
    • Describe the relationships among the body systems.

  • Physical health and hygiene--personal health and hygiene (2)
    • List specific resources or facilities where members of the community can obtain medical care.

    • Explain ways to use health information to help self and others, including seizure awareness, diabetes education, and response plans such as first aid or cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

    • Identify barriers related to solving health problems and ways to overcome barriers.

    • Explain the course, signs, symptoms, and treatments of vector-borne illnesses such as Lyme disease or West Nile Virus.

  • Mental health and wellness--social and emotional health (3)
    • Identify and analyze different emotions and causal thoughts in self.

    • Analyze the relationship between thoughts, feelings, and behaviors and demonstrate healthy techniques for managing reactions in times of emotional stress.

    • Evaluate the importance of social groups and peer influences and explain how they can affect individual mental health and wellness.

    • Demonstrate perspective-taking and communication skills for building and maintaining healthy relationships and determining when and how to end unhealthy relationships.

    • Analyze similarities and differences between one's own and others' perspectives.

    • Practice conflict resolution and mediation skills.

  • Mental health and wellness--developing a healthy self-concept (4)
    • Describe how internal and external factors influence self-esteem.

    • Identify and develop strategies for setting long-term personal goals.

    • Create and discuss personal life goals that one wishes to achieve and consider the financial impact of graduating from high school, having a full-time job, and waiting until marriage if one plans to have children.

    • Identify decision-making skills that promote individual, family, and community mental health.

  • Mental health and wellness--risk and protective factors (5)
    • Explain how adolescent brain development influences cognitive processing, emotions, and decision making.

    • Identify and describe how environmental influences such as air, water, or noise can affect an individual's mental health.

    • Discuss the influence of childhood trauma and how to recognize, process, and overcome negative events.

  • Mental health and wellness--identifying and managing mental health and wellness concerns (6)
    • Describe methods to support others who have long-term physical health conditions.

    • Examine ways to influence peers positively and promote resiliency in others in stressful situations.

    • Differentiate between healthy and unhealthy self-management strategies for stress, anxiety, depression, trauma, loss, and grief.

    • Describe the consequences of disordered eating and eating disorders such as bulimia, anorexia, and binge eating disorder and the importance of seeking help from a parent or another trusted adult for oneself or others related to disordered eating.

    • Discuss the suicide risk and suicide protective factors identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the importance of telling a parent or another trusted adult if one observes the warning signs in self or others.

    • Research and discuss protective factors and healthy self-management strategies to avoid self-harming behaviors.

    • Examine how the use of suicide prevention resources such as the National Suicide Prevention Hotline can reduce the likelihood of suicide.

  • Healthy eating and physical activity--food and beverage daily recommendations (7)
    • Analyze food labels and menus to determine the nutritional value of foods and make healthy decisions about daily caloric intake.

    • Develop a personal dietary plan.

    • Identify and practice strategies for choosing healthy foods and beverages in diverse social environments, including at home, at school, and while dining out.

  • Healthy eating and physical activity--physical activity (8)
    • Explain the relationships between nutrition, physical activity, quality of life, and disease in terms of their mental, physical, and social benefits.

    • Identify how to balance caloric intake and physical activity.

    • Apply the CDC guidelines for daily physical activity to develop a physical fitness plan using appropriate technology.

  • Healthy eating and physical activity--nutrition and physical activity literacy (9)
    • Develop and examine progress of short-and long-term goals toward achieving appropriate levels of physical activity, improving personal physical fitness level, and making healthy personal food choices.

    • Explain how media influences buying decisions regarding physical fitness equipment or nutritional products.

  • Healthy eating and physical activity--risk and protective factors (10)
    • Analyze the impact of moderate physical activity and healthy dietary practices in the prevention of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes.

    • Analyze risk factors that may lead to the development of chronic conditions and formulate strategies to reduce the likelihood of developing chronic conditions.

    • Identify community and digital resources that can assist in developing healthy eating and physical activity behaviors.

    • Investigate and compare the nutritional differences between preparing and serving fresh food or minimally processed food and serving commercially prepared or highly processed foods.

  • Injury and violence prevention and safety--safety skills and unintentional injury (11)
    • Demonstrate basic first-aid procedures, including CPR and the choking rescue.

  • Injury and violence prevention and safety--healthy home, school, and community climate (12)
    • Analyze strategies for and the benefits of avoiding violence, gangs, weapons, and human trafficking.

    • Define safe haven and identify designated safe haven locations in the community.

    • Evaluate the dangers associated with a variety of weapons.

    • Evaluate the importance of complying with rules prohibiting possession of and the improper use of weapons.

    • Create a personal safety plan.

  • Injury and violence prevention and safety--digital citizenship and media (13)
    • Develop strategies to resist inappropriate digital and online communication such as social media posts, sending and receiving photos, sexting, and pornography.

    • Discuss and analyze the consequences resulting from inappropriate digital and online communication such as social media posts, sending and receiving photos, sexting, and pornography.

    • Evaluate strategies and techniques for identity protection in digital and online environments.

    • Identify how technology is used to recruit or manipulate potential victims of sex trafficking.

    • Research the current legal consequences of cyberbullying and inappropriate digital and online communication.

  • Injury and violence prevention and safety--interpersonal violence (14)
    • Identify forms of family violence, including physical, mental, and emotional violence.

    • Describe the serious effects of bullying, cyberbullying, or harassment such as suicidal ideation and other effects on the individual.

    • Explain the responsibility to report bullying behavior, including cyberbullying.

    • Describe the seriousness of various forms of bullying such as harassment.

    • Analyze strategies for prevention and intervention of all forms of bullying and cyberbullying such as emotional, physical, social, and sexual.

    • Summarize the advantages of seeking advice and feedback regarding the use of decision-making and problem-solving skills related to personal safety.

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs--use, misuse, and physiological effects (15)
    • Differentiate between appropriate and inappropriate use of prescription and over-the-counter drugs, including combining drugs, and the outcomes of each.

    • Identify and describe the categories of prescription drugs and their proper uses.

    • Identify and explain the importance of each component of an over-the-counter drug warning label.

    • Describe how substance misuse and addiction to alcohol, tobacco, vaping products, drugs, and other substances, including prescription drugs, affect the body systems and brain.

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs--short- and long-term impacts (16)
    • Analyze and explain the short-and long-term health consequences of addiction to alcohol and tobacco and prescription and over-the-counter drug misuse and substance use disorders.

    • Analyze the importance of alternative activities to drug and substance use and misuse on mental and social health.

    • Analyze the legal consequences of the use and misuse of alcohol; tobacco; drugs, including prescription drugs; and other substances.

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs--treatment (17)
    • Identify and describe treatment options for substance abuse and addiction.

    • Identify signs and symptoms of alcohol; tobacco; drugs, including prescription drugs; and other substance use and misuse such as using medicine prescribed for someone else or for reasons other than intended.

    • Identify at least one example of who, when, where, and how to get help related to the use and misuse of alcohol; tobacco; drugs, including prescription drugs; and other substances.

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs--risk and protective factors (18)
    • Examine the effects and role of peer influence on decision making and problem solving regarding the use and misuse of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs.

    • Examine physical and social influences on alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use behaviors.

    • Differentiate among the relationships of alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and other substances and the roles these substances play in unsafe situations such as drinking and driving.

    • Identify support systems and describe ways to report the suspected abuse of drugs to a parent, school administrator, teacher, or another trusted adult.

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs--prevention (19)
    • Develop and apply strategies, including demonstrating refusal skills, for avoiding alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs in various scenarios.

  • Reproductive and sexual health--healthy relationships (20)
    • Compare and contrast the difference between friendship, infatuation, dating/romantic relationships, and marriage.

    • Explain how friendships provide a foundation for healthy dating/romantic relationships.

    • Describe healthy ways to express friendship, affection, and love.

    • Describe appropriate and effective methods of communicating emotions in healthy dating/romantic relationships and marriage.

    • Evaluate the importance of mutual respect, trust, support, honesty, commitment, and reliability in healthy dating/romantic relationships and marriage.

    • Describe behaviors in dating/romantic relationships that enhance dignity and respect.

    • Describe the benefits of healthy marriages, including companionship and social, emotional, financial, and health benefits.

  • Reproductive and sexual health--personal safety, limits, and boundaries (21)
    • Explain that physical, emotional, and sexual abuse and exploitation are all forms of abuse.

    • Explain the social and emotional impacts of sexual harassment, sexual abuse, sexual assault, and sex trafficking.

    • Define dating violence and the characteristics of unhealthy or harmful relationships, including anger, controlling behavior, jealousy, manipulation, and isolation.

    • Identify protective strategies for avoiding unsafe situations that heighten the risk of sexual harassment, sexual abuse, sexual assault, sex trafficking, and teen dating violence.

    • Explain the importance of reporting to a parent or another trusted adult sexual harassment, sexual abuse, sexual assault, sex trafficking, and dating violence involving self or others.

    • Describe how a healthy sense of self and making decisions regarding setting and respecting personal boundaries promote healthy dating/romantic relationships.

    • Discuss and practice how refusal skills can be used to resist negative peer influences and reinforce personal boundaries to avoid dangerous situations and behaviors that increase sexual risk in dating/romantic relationships.

    • Explain the importance of clearly communicating and respecting personal boundaries and why individuals have the right to refuse sexual contact.

  • Reproductive and sexual health--anatomy, puberty, reproduction, and pregnancy (22)
    • Compare and contrast the physical, hormonal, and emotional changes in males and females that occur during puberty and adolescence.

    • Identify how the process of fertilization occurs between a man and a woman through sexual intercourse.

    • Explain significant milestones of fetal development and the harmful effects on the fetus of certain substances such as alcohol, tobacco, and prescription drugs and environmental hazards such as lead.

    • Describe the importance of telling a parent or another trusted adult, obtaining early pregnancy testing, and seeking prenatal care if signs of pregnancy occur.

    • Define the emotional changes that may occur during and after pregnancy, including postpartum depression, and discuss resources for support and treatment.

  • Reproductive and sexual health--sexual risk (23)
    • Explain how teen pregnancy is a possible outcome of sexual activity.

    • Explain the short-and long-term educational, financial, and social impacts of pregnancy on teen parents, the child, families, and society.

    • Identify the difference between bacterial and viral sexually transmitted diseases/sexually transmitted infections (STDs/STIs), including long-term or lifetime effects such as infertility and cancer.

    • Describe various modes of transmission of STDs/STIs.

    • Identify the prevalence of STDs/STIs among teens by referencing county, state, and/or federal data sources.

    • List the signs and symptoms of STDs/STIs, including human papillomavirus (HPV), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), chlamydia, syphilis, gonorrhea, herpes, and trichomoniasis, and explain why not all STDs/STIs show symptoms initially.

    • Explain the importance of STD/STI screening, testing, and early treatment for sexually active individuals, including during yearly physicals or if there is a concern.

    • Identify community resources, a minor's right to consent under certain circumstances, and the importance of parent or other trusted adult support for STD/STI testing and treatment.

    • Identify emotional risks that can be associated with sexual activity for unmarried persons of school age, including stress, anxiety, and depression.

    • Identify support from parents and other trusted adults to be abstinent from sexual activity and create strategies for building peer support to be abstinent.

    • Analyze the importance of abstinence as the preferred choice of behavior in relationship to all sexual activity for unmarried persons of school age.

    • Analyze the effectiveness and the risks and failure rates (human-use reality rates) of barrier protection and other contraceptive methods in the prevention of STDs/STIs and pregnancy.

    • Explain that HPV vaccines can help prevent the transmission of the most common types of HPV, a virus that can cause genital warts and cervical cancer and other cancers in males and females.

    • Research and explain the benefits of abstinence from sexual activity such as increased self-esteem, self-confidence, and student academic achievement.

    • Define legal implications of teen pregnancy, including the legal effects of acknowledgement and proof of paternity.

    • Describe legal aspects of sexual activity with a minor person, including the legal age of consent, statutory rape, aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault, sexual abuse, and indecency with a child.

    • Examine the legal ramifications of sexual offenses such as sexual harassment, sexual abuse, and sexual assault.