Your Questions, Answered

  • We are grateful that you are ready to learn alongside your girl! Our live Zoom classes are for girls only, so we intend in every way to keep you as the caregiver in the loop! You will receive multiple emails throughout the series regarding what we did in class and how you can continue the conversation at home. Our ultimate goal is that you feel more equipped and ready to engage in conversations with your girl as a result of her time with Girls Who Know®.

  • We use Zoom for our live online classes.

  • Caregivers are encouraged to email their mentor if their girl must miss a class. A girl can watch a class recording if needed.

  • Girls have fewer distractions and have the best experience when they are on their own device and in their own space

  • One ticket covers all girls in the same household in the same series. If siblings are attending separate age classes, they will each need their own ticket.

  • No, the GWK curriculum does not promote or teach any particular religious beliefs or philosophy and God is not mentioned. The classes are designed with our core mission as the focus: to inspire and inform girls to love who they are. All teaching is based on providing girls with opportunities to practice listening to their bodies and trusting what they need and responding to those needs.

  • Girls Who Know®️classes focus on what it means to have a girl body. We use girl specific language and anatomical girl physiology is definitely the focus. There is no discussion on gender-expression/fluidity, homosexuality, and other social/political issues in the curriculum. We will use terms like girl bodies, female bodies as we discuss anatomical parts and function. We will weave throughout how inspiring and amazing our bodies are.

  • Yes! We would love to match a mentor to your group of 5-10 girls. Reach out here and let us know you are interested in setting up a custom series for more information..

  • Girls Who Know® is like a club of girls who know the truth about how AMAZING it is to be girls.  In these classes, you will make friends with other girls your age, play games, and learn more about your body, including the names of girl body parts.  You’ll learn about the best way to love and honor YOU.  After class, you will all get matching purple wristbands to remind you of what you know!

  • Girls Who Know® creates an environment where girls get to experience themselves differently.  In these classes, you will make friends with other girls your age, learn inspiring things you never knew about your body, including your girl anatomy.  You’ll learn that your body contains powerful, creative forces and the best way to honor that truth about yourself. You will also have a chance to feel inspired by how childbirth works. After class, you will all get matching purple wristbands to remind you of what you know!

  • Classes are recorded and only shared with other girls in that specific class if they are unable to attend a meeting.

  • Yes! Click here to get our recommendations.

  • We do not teach about sexual intercourse at Girls Who Know®. We know it is something many parents and caregivers understandably care a lot about. What is interesting is that it actually does not come up in our classes. 

    At Girls Who Know, we focus on girl bodies and when it comes to sex, that is about a relationship with another person. There are a lot of different values and family beliefs around those topics and that is a conversation we would encourage girls to have with their own family and adults that they trust.

  • No, self-exploration is not taught or encouraged in any Girls Who Know®️classes.

    We teach girls that they can actually reach their own cervix (at the top of the vagina), and the more they learn about it, the better they will know what's happening in their body.  We teach them that getting familiar with the changes in their cervix throughout each month can inform them about what's happening at different times in their cycle. We teach what the cervix might look and feel like during each part of the menstrual cycle.

    We inform girls about what the clitoris is called and where it is. We tell them it’s a sensitive organ with thousands of nerve endings so it’s important to keep it protected. We say that the clitoris is usually part of sex so it becomes more important when they become women, rather than when they are young.