That's what a new study claims - According to a study conducted by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, young adults may believe in planned pregnancies, but their habits say otherwise.

Of the 1,800 young adults surveyed, 29 percent of women and 42 percent of men said there is somewhat of a likely chance that they will have unprotected sex in the next three months. It's very likely for 17 percent of women and 19 percent of men.

Laura Lindberg, senior research associate at the nonprofit Guttmacher Institute, attributes the results to abstinence-only education. She tells CNN, "Abstinence-only curriculums have gone explicitly out of their way to teach misconceptions about contraception ... This generation of 20-somethings have missed many opportunities to get medically accurate and correct information."

The majority of people said they knew very little or nothing at all about oral contraceptives and 30 percent knew little about condoms.

Even more startling? How many myths men and women believed. Twenty-eight percent of men believed wearing two condoms is better than wearing one. Eighteen percent believed that having sex while standing up would reduce the chance of getting females pregnant. Four in 10 respondents said that birth control has no effect on pregnancy, and that you become pregnant when it's your time.

Do these results say that young people are stupid?

No, but it does say they're not getting educated. Young adults are subscribing to the knowledge of uneducated peers and of abstinence only education, which doesn't provide accurate and practical information about contraception and safe sex practices. They may know about condoms but they don't know how to use them properly. They may know about the pill but not where to get it and how to use it effectively. They think they know about safe sex, but they're actually increasing their risk of getting pregnant. It's frustrating and devastating and the results are rippling through the communities: a quarter of teenage girls have an STD and teen pregnancy is on the rise.

Regular readers may think of me as a broken record, but it's too important not to repeat: we need to educate young people about their sexual health and that means providing accurate information about sex, contraceptives, STDs, and sexuality. Turning a blind eye to the reality of teens having sex will not make the problem go away. It will only make things worse.

Nina Jacinto is a Bay Area based blogger whose writing focuses on racial justice, reproductive health and budget shopping! In addition to EmpowHer, she blogs at Stuff Under Twenty