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Cover of Sexuality and Our Diversity: Integrating Culture with the Biopsychosocial v3.0
Published: 
February 2025
Page Count: 
922
ISBN (Digital): 
979-8-88794-155-4

Sexuality and Our Diversity: Integrating Culture with the Biopsychosocial

Version 3.0
By Marcus Tye

Included Supplements

Key Features

  • Contemporary focus on interactions of biological, individual psychological, social, and cultural factors that underpin human sexuality and sexual expression
  • Over 60 embedded links to streaming videos and over 300 websites engage students, reinforce or augment topics, and enrich online and hybrid courses
  • Written for learners with varying levels of preparation and interest in the subject to build a solid foundation and nuanced understanding
  • Global/comparative coverage, such as drawing parallels between gender roles, economic circumstances, and health in many countries, including the United States
  • Infuses LBGTQIA+ cultural variations, inclusion, and equity throughout the main narrative, not as marginalized feature boxes or in a single “diversity” chapter
  • Sex positive perspective for kink, poly, and other communities, while including content that also represents monogamy, asexuality, and voluntary celibacy
  • Supportive learning features
    • “Learning Objectives” preview each main head section and help focus the reader’s attention
    • “Key Terms” help students understand and become comfortable with important vocabulary and phrasing
      “Key Takeaways” at the end of each main section reflect the corresponding Learning Objectives and summarize key ideas in bullet-point fashion. Key Takeaways enable the learner to pause and consolidate the information just read or experienced into a “chunk.” This process enables the reader to better understand and retain the section’s content and its key concepts
    • “Exercises/Discussions” at the end of every main section stimulate discussion, help students apply content to real-world situations, facilitate flipped-classroom assignments, and support online and asynchronous courses. Answer guidelines are included in the instructor’s manual
    • “Recommended Resources” include references to websites, books, and films that expand students’ understanding of the chapter’s topics
  • Customizable

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Students

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Sexuality and Our Diversity: Integrating Culture with the Biopsychosocial is suitable for courses called Human Sexuality, Sexuality, Gender and Sexuality studies, or similar titles courses taught in psychology departments, human development, family studies, nursing/allied health, personal health, and sociology departments. Appropriate for courses taught at the undergraduate and master’s levels at two- and four-year colleges and universities.

Sexuality and Our Diversity: Integrating Culture with the Biopsychosocial takes an integrated approach to exploring the complex dimensions of biology, culture, psychology, sociology, history, and philosophy that explain human sexual diversity. The author contextualizes specific topics, such as sexually transmitted infections, in a broader picture of comprehensive sex education and public policy, access to healthcare, and economic equality. Topics build from basic to advanced to support less well-prepared students while keeping those with prior coursework fully engaged.

New in This Version

  • Every chapter reflects substantial research updates while preserving references to important, classic studies
  • Curated videos and references to websites updated overall and to specifically include structural racism in health
  • Updated use of language to better reflect equality overall, particularly preferences of transgender persons
  • Increased emphasis on the social determinants of health and health inequities, access to contraception and abortion, and maternal and infant mortality including racial disparities
  • Reflects the current, endemic state of the COVID-19 virus
  • New information on mpox (“human monkeypox”)
  • Impact of overturning Roe v. Wade on legal restrictions on reproductive freedom and transgender-affirming medical care
  • Title IX regulation changes regarding evidentiary standards for cases of sexual assault on college campuses
  • New research in genetics and neuroscience
  • Discussions on sexual dysfunction now include the DSM-5-TR and the final version of the ICD-11
  • Global trends in public policy and law, sexlessness in young adults, LGBTQIA+ equality and civil rights, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) definitions of social determinants of health (SDOH) compared to The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), and WHO’s explicit emphasis on socioeconomic and political factors including societal values
Instructor’s Manual

Instructor’s Manual

The Instructor’s Manual guides you through the main concepts of each chapter and important elements such as learning objectives, key terms, and key takeaways. Can include answers to chapter exercises, group activity suggestions, and discussion questions.

PowerPoint Lecture Notes

PowerPoint Lecture Notes

A PowerPoint presentation highlighting key learning objectives and the main concepts for each chapter are available for you to use in your classroom. You can either cut and paste sections or use the presentation as a whole.

Test Generator - powered by Cognero

Test Generator - powered by Cognero

FlatWorld has partnered with Cognero, a leading online assessment system, that allows you to create printable tests from FlatWorld provided content.

Test Item File

Test Item File

Need assistance in supplementing your quizzes and tests? Our test-item files (in Word format) contain many multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, and short-answer questions.

Sample Syllabi

Sample Syllabi

Sample syllabi provide useful templates to help new faculty adopters revise their teaching plans to match their assigned FlatWorld textbook or lend insights to existing adopters on how to organize their classes.

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Other Supplements

Other Supplements

Solutions manuals, sample exams, video learning segments, workbooks, cases and lab manuals are just some of the extras our books will offer depending on the needs of the course. Click here to see what this textbook offers.

At FlatWorld, we take pride in providing a range of high-quality supplements alongside our titles, to help instructors teach effectively. Supplements are available for instructors who have registered their adoption with us. If you need to review or preview something specific, please contact us.


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Marcus Tye SUNY College at Plattsburgh

Marcus C. Tye (PhD University of North Dakota) is Provost and Senior Vice President of Academic Affairs at SUNY Plattsburgh. Other administrative positions have included Dean of the College of Health Professions at Pace University, and Dean of the School of Health Sciences at CUNY College of Staten Island. He is a licensed clinical psychologist, and his quantitative research has included the role of privileged communication (confidentiality) in psychotherapy, children’s memory, and credibility assessment. Marcus’s work in sexuality has included fair custody evaluations with LGBTQIA+ parents and the ethical dilemmas posed by “re-orientation therapy.” He first started teaching human sexuality in 2003 and aimed to write a comprehensive textbook that was accessible for beginning students, yet relevant for advanced students. His goal was to include cultural variation, gender and economic equity, global development, and LGBTQIA+ equity throughout the text. Dissatisfied with texts that were heavily influenced by one theoretical perspective or only focused on the United States, he has written a text that is respectful of the multiple intellectual disciplines that contribute to a full understanding of gender and sexuality, including neuroscience, developmental, cognitive and social psychology, while also respecting the work of historians, comparative public policy and law. When teaching and writing about sexuality, Dr. Tye explains to students how to reconcile seemingly contradictory perspectives and conflicting studies on topics such as gender differences. He contextualizes specific topics such as STIs in a broader picture of comprehensive sex education and public policy, access to health care, and economic inequality. Prior to full-time academic administration, Dr. Tye’s other regular teaching included the evolutionary origins of human nature, cross-cultural psychology, and abnormal psychology. He has an AB from Princeton University, with additional undergraduate study at St. Anne’s College, Oxford University. Marcus’s doctoral degree is from the University of North Dakota, with clinical training completed within the New York State Office of Mental Health. He has lived and worked in Europe, Asia, Micronesia, and North America, and cultural diversity forms a core part of his professional writing and work. 

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