Pubdate: Sun, 23 Oct 2005
Source: Mail Tribune, The (Medford, OR)
Copyright: 2005 The Mail Tribune
Contact:  http://www.mailtribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/642
Note: Only prints LTEs from within it's circulation area.
Author: Anita Burke

SEX, DRUGS AND WHAT TO

Medford School District Proposes To Update Its Health Curriculum For 
Grades Seven Through 12

As a mom, Amy Tiger worries whether her eighth-grade daughter is 
ready to hear about condoms and other forms of birth control at 
school, but as principal at McLoughlin Middle School, she knows 
students are experimenting with drugs and sexual activity.

In the principal's office Tiger has had to suspend a student for 
selling prescription medication at school and guide a conversation 
between a shocked mother and a girl whose behavior problems stemmed 
from her budding bisexuality.

That's why Tiger led the charge to update the Medford School 
District's health curriculum for grades seven through 12, including 
the hot-button issues of sex education and drug-use prevention.

The district received a $14,000 grant from Healthy Kids Learn Better, 
a partnership between the state's education and health and human 
services departments, to evaluate and develop a health curriculum. 
For more than a year, Tiger and a committee of teachers have worked 
to make sure what's taught in Medford's classrooms matches state law, 
new state curriculum standards adopted in February, needs of parents 
and the behavior of students.

Next month, the committee will introduce its proposed curriculum to 
the school board, opening up a two-week public review period. With 
new state standards in place and a deadline of spring 2008 for 
schools to align with those standards, other districts likely won't 
be far behind.

Medford's proposal calls for the district to abandon textbooks it 
bought in 1991 to take up teaching guides and educational magazines 
supplemented by state training for teachers.

"Health is one of those areas that is always changing," Tiger said. 
"That's why the state recommends not buying a text, because it will 
be outdated so soon."

The new state standards call for schools to teach kids how to make 
healthy decisions relating to alcohol, tobacco, drugs, disease 
control and prevention, sexuality, nutrition, physical activity, 
injury prevention, and violence and suicide prevention.

State law already required comprehensive sex education that includes 
information about contraceptives, AIDS/HIV prevention information and 
prevention education related to alcohol, drugs and tobacco use.

Most of that information was taught in Medford schools, but in a 
scattered fashion, officials said.

The proposed curriculum strives to deliver age-appropriate lessons 
that build from year to year and ensure that students learn to deal 
with situations in the classroom before they run into them in real 
life, officials said. It offers a skills-based approach that will 
teach kids how to find information and make decisions for themselves, 
techniques teachers said work better than dry lectures.

Students take a quarter-long health class in seventh and eighth 
grades and a semester as sophomores. Health information is included 
in a freshman life skills class and in family health classes for 
juniors and seniors.

Perhaps the biggest change is an introduction to contraception in 
eighth grade rather than 10th grade.

"Research has shown behaviors need to be addressed two years before 
they might happen," Tiger said.

The most recent annual Oregon Healthy Teens survey done by the state 
health department showed that 45.6 percent of high school juniors in 
Medford have had sexual intercourse; 13 percent of eighth-graders have had sex.

"If we want to serve all kids, there are kids who need this 
information," Tiger said.

For those worried that promoting abstinence and telling kids about 
contraception is a mixed message, she noted that the state requires a 
comprehensive program with information about contraceptives.

"We can be abstinence-based, but not to the exclusion of other 
things," Tiger said.

Board member Cynthia Wright said she had conversations with friends 
who were concerned about the possible changes in the health 
curriculum until one family friend, a doctor, said he saw the daily 
consequences of people not having good information about sex and drugs.

"He said he was glad his kids would get the message from parents and 
teachers," Wright recounted.

"One of the fears is that we will supplant parents and tell kids 
something different than the parents' message," Tiger said. "The goal 
is to be partners with parents."

The district also wants to develop a mechanism for addressing the 
many community groups that want to offer presentations to kids about 
drinking, drugs, health choices, self-esteem and other topics. Tiger 
and Curriculum Director Todd Bloomquist would like to see some sort 
of district review committee that could decide which programs are 
effective and appropriate.

"Scare tactics and shock value don't work because (students) don't 
remember that when they are in a tough situation," Bloomquist said.

Therefore, the curriculum would focus on refusal skills, which 
research has shown can help kids avoid myriad troubles.

Eighth-grade health classes also will give kids an overview of 
problem drugs, with more specific details provided in 10th grade. 
Methamphetamine, the focus of a countywide task force, will be 
included in those sections, along with other drugs.

The state healthy teen survey showed 76.5 percent of juniors had 
tried alcohol and 47.5 percent had tried marijuana. Among 
eighth-graders, 51.1 percent had tried alcohol and 19.1 percent had 
tried marijuana. Use of meth, cocaine, heroin, ecstasy and 
hallucinogens in the past 30 days among both groups was rare.

"We want to teach the tools to avoid drugs, no matter what the drug 
of the week is," Bloomquist said.

Medford health teachers are working with others from around the 
county to help develop a program on meth. When completed, that 
information will be evaluated just as any other addition to the 
district's curriculum would be, Tiger said.

Maggie Sullivan, education program coordinator for Planned Parenthood 
in Jackson County, said she likes the work Medford schools are doing 
on their curriculum and policies on evaluating guest educational 
programs, such as the Planned Parenthood-sponsored Teen Theater 
troupe that uses drama to explore self-esteem, peer pressure, healthy 
choices and other tough aspects of growing up. She said the troupe is 
creating a preview performance for parents and teachers that could 
help the district evaluate the program.

Sullivan praised the district's research-based approach to a 
curriculum area that can evoke strong emotion.

"They are being careful and deliberate to find programs that have 
been evaluated for efficacy," she said. "They are looking at what works."

Jane Stevenson, Jackson County Public Health's community health 
education coordinator, works with all school districts in the county. 
She said Medford is ahead of the game, thanks to its work with the 
Healthy Kids Learn Better grant that she helped them land. She also 
was on the team with health teachers to study the district's needs 
and programs that might meet them.

"They got to see many curriculums and the research to see if they 
were effective," she said. "It was a very thorough evaluation."

Stevenson noted that tackling a health curriculum, especially the 
parts dealing with sexuality, can be difficult for districts.

"People don't want to deal with adversarial issues," she said. "A 
vocal minority can derail what is needed."

State standards can help push districts to deal with a potentially 
emotionally charged topic, as well as ensure all kids get the 
information they need, she said.

Eagle Point has started re-evaluating its program, Stevenson said. 
Phoenix-Talent's comprehensive program likely will need few changes, she said.

"This is a community issue," Medford Superintendent Phil Long said. 
"I think we will have a model health program that meets state 
standards and is specific to Medford."

[Sidebar]

New Materials Proposed

The following are some of the new materials proposed for the Medford 
School District's new health curriculum for grades seven through 12:

"Protecting Oneself and Others" is a high school program designed to 
alert students to the health consequences of using tobacco, alcohol, 
marijuana and other drugs. It promotes risk-assessment and 
decision-making skills and gives kids opportunities to practice 
resisting drugs. It's produced by Education Development Center, a 
Pennsylvania nonprofit. On the Web, see 
(http://main.edc.org)http://main.edc.org.

"Making Proud Choices" is a program for eighth-graders designed to 
provide them with knowledge, confidence and skills necessary to 
reduce their risk of sexually transmitted diseases, HIV and pregnancy 
by abstaining from sex or using condoms if they choose to have sex. 
It's published by ETR Associates, a nonprofit based in Scotts Valley, 
Calif. See (http://pub.etr.org)http://pub.etr.org.

"Safer Choices" is a high school program designed to prevent HIV, 
other sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy. It's published by 
ETR Associates.

"Current Health" is a monthly magazine for grades seven through 12 
published by Weekly Reader Corp. It offers health news and 
information about nutrition, fitness, personal health and the harmful 
effects of drugs. It aligns with state health curriculum and National 
Health Education standards. See 
(http://www.weeklyreader.com/teens/current_health).
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MAP posted-by: Beth