Pubdate: Wed, 19 Dec 2001
Source: Foster's Daily Democrat (NH)
Copyright: 2001 Geo. J. Foster Co.
Contact:  http://www.fosters.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/160
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

PORTSMOUTH MIDDLE SCHOOL REPLACES DARE WITH ANOTHER ANTI-DRUG PROGRAM

PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (AP) - A Portsmouth middle school is the latest in 
the state to replace the nationally recognized D.A.R.E. program with 
a longer program that police say has a much better record of keeping 
kids off drugs and alcohol.

Portsmouth Middle School, the city's only middle school with 555 
pupils, is going to try the three-year Life Skills Training 
curriculum that follows students throughout their middle school 
years. Police Lt. Bob Carbone said data on the Life Skills program 
shows a dramatic reduction in drug and alcohol use by high school 
kids who have participated in the training.

"There are noteworthy differences, something like 50 percent fewer 
kids using alcohol and tobacco through high school," Carbone said of 
studies compiled on Life Skills Training.

The one-shot D.A.R.E. program that teaches kids to say no to drugs 
had been taught in Portsmouth fifth grade classes since 1988. Two 
years ago, the program moved up to sixth graders, in part, because 
police wanted a presence in the middle school.

"When D.A.R.E. was born, most sixth grades were at the elementary 
level," Carbone said. "Since then, they've moved to middle schools.

"But we also felt some of the material was too advanced for fifth 
graders. We wanted to delay the maturation process related to drugs 
and alcohol."

At least three other schools in the state - Timberlane Middle School, 
McKelvie School in Bedford and Indian River Middle School in Enfield 
- - have adopted the Life Skills program.

Portsmouth Middle School prevention coordinator Dana Sinisgalli is on 
a three-year U.S. Department of Education grant. Her duties include 
researching the best prevention programs available, which is how she 
found Life Skills Training.

The program involves having every sixth grader participate in 15 
lessons this year, 10 booster lessons in seventh grade and five when 
they reach eighth grade. The course structure is interactive and 
covers a range of topics that, according to Sinisgalli, research 
shows are related to substance abuse.

While D.A.R.E. is taught by police officers, Life Skills will be 
taught by educators, with police support. Developed by Dr. Gilbert J. 
Botvin, a professor of public health and psychology at Cornell 
University, Life Skills focuses on the key social and psychological 
issues that foster substance abuse.

"We are talking about self-imaging, self-improvement, goal setting," 
Sinisgalli said. "Then we move on to decision making - all of the 
things that come into play when someone is faced with the choice of 
turning down drugs or alcohol."

The curriculum also includes segments on advertising, violence, anger 
and coping with anxiety. Relationship skills and communication skills 
also are explored.

"It's all part of prevention," Sinisgalli said. "It helps the kids 
learn to make good decisions. If they know how to handle themselves 
in certain situations, they are less likely to give in."

The Life Skills Training course, which debuts after Christmas 
vacation, will be taught primarily by sixth-grade teachers, along 
with support staff, including the school's resource officer. Sixteen 
teachers and support staff members also attended training sessions.

The course is funded by a three-year grant from the New Hampshire 
Safe and Drug-Free School Program.

"With Life Skills, the message is reinforced all through middle 
school," Carbone said. "It's kind of like taking Algebra I three 
years. You'd be pretty good at it by the third year."
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MAP posted-by: Josh