Pubdate: Mon, 23 Dec 2002 Source: Gaffney Ledger, The (SC) Copyright: 2002 The Gaffney Ledger Contact: http://www.gaffneyledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1890 Author: Scott Powell FEDERAL LEGISLATION BREATHES NEW LIFE INTO D.A.R.E. PROGRAM Hundreds of Cherokee County students have gone through the D.A.R.E. drug and violence prevention class in the 13 years it has been provided to elementary students. But how successful is the program and what happens to these students when they enter high school? There have only been limited national studies about the effectiveness of the D.A.R.E (Drugs Alcohol Resistance Education) program, and the results have been mixed. In fact, the state Department of Education briefly toyed with not funding the D.A.R.E. program this school year. "The state Department of Education was thinking about not funding D.A.R.E. anymore because studies had been inconclusive about the program's effectiveness," said Mary Jones, who coordinates the district's alcohol and drug prevention programs. "This all changed when the federal No Child Left Behind Act was approved. With safe school havens being a major part of the act, we have seen renewed focus on the importance of programs like D.A.R.E. and will see more and more accountability in the future." The district received $35,000 in federal funding for D.A.R.E. this school year. That budget is supplemented by the Cherokee County Sheriff's Department, which provides a full-time D.A.R.E. instructor. D.A.R.E course topics include understanding mind-altering drugs and their consequences, changing beliefs about drug use, building self-esteem and learning conflict resolution skills. Other aspects of the course deal with resisting gang and group violence, managing stress and finding alternatives to drug use, and the importance of positive role models. This was part of a revised curriculum that was done on the D.A.R.E program in 1994. An evaluation by the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency reviewed the effectiveness of D.A.R.E. following the revision. The Pennyslvania study found that D.A.R.E. participants were less likely to use inhalants, smokeless tobacco and crack cocaine in the 11th grade. It also concluded the best results were observed when D.A.R.E. was combined with an age-appropiate curriculum. Within these limits, the Pennyslvania study found the following impact among fifth and sixth graders who received D.A.R.E instruction: - Reduced rates of substance abuse, particularly in tobacco use, with that knowledge retained through the seventh grade - More widespread positive perceptions of police, with students keeping that attitude for 1 to 5 years after D.A.R.E - Heightened awareness of media influence on alcohol and tobacco use and better knowledge of ways to say no to drug use, with that knowledge kept for two to five years. Cherokee County Sheriff Bill Blanton has sought a grant for several years that would expand the D.A.R.E. from elementary schools into the middle schools to increase the long-term benefits of the program. The district would like to see D.A.R.E instruction expand into other grades, Jones said. "It has a positive impact on students' attitudes, their student achievement and attendance," she said. "The knowledge that students gain through programs like D.A.R.E. has an impact on their views about alcohol and drugs and ability to make good decisions." Students echoed Jones' thoughts in some of their comments on the D.A.R.E. essays they were required to write. "I like D.A.R.E. because we learn not to use drugs. I've learned things I didn't know," Goucher Elementary student Jacob Gilbert wrote. "I think if you use drugs and think you're cooler than everybody else, you're wrong. Everybody else is cooler than you are." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth