Pubdate: Wed, 13 Feb 2008
Source: North County Times (Escondido, CA)
Copyright: 2008 North County Times
Contact:  http://www.nctimes.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080
Author: Stacy Brandt

FEWER OCEANSIDE STUDENTS SAY THEY DO DRUGS, DRINK

School Board Reviews Annual Survey Results

OCEANSIDE -- Fewer students in the Oceanside Unified  School District
are doing drugs and drinking, according  to the results of a survey
released Tuesday, though  there is concern that middle school students
may need  more prevention programs.

"We have good news to show you," Jim Shirley, a program  specialist
with the district, said before he presented  the results to the school
board Tuesday.

Last year, 64 percent of the 11th-graders surveyed  reported having
ever consumed alcohol -- down from 73  percent in 2001 -- and 39
percent said they've smoked  marijuana, down from 47 percent during
the same period.

The results showed similar declines in the other  grades, except
seventh.

In seventh grade, students reported alcohol use was  down slightly --
from 32 percent in 2001 to 30 percent  last year -- but the use of
marijuana and inhalants  showed a slight increase, from 12 percent to
13 percent  for marijuana and from 13 percent to 16 percent for
inhalants, the report shows.

Tuesday's report was based on an anonymous survey  conducted last year
with students in grades five,  seven, nine and 11. Districts must
administer the  survey every two years to qualify for certain state
and  federal money.

The state requires at least 60 percent of students in  each grade to
take the survey, though it's up to  students and parent whether they
participate or not. In  Oceanside Unified, roughly 70 percent of
students in  each grade level took the survey last year.

In addition to information about drug and alcohol use,  the survey
also included questions about violence,  health and
perceptions.

Of the seventh-graders who took the survey last year,  32 percent said
they have been in a fight -- up from 29  percent the year before --
and 17 percent said they  have brought a weapon to school in the last
12 months,  up from 15 percent the year before. In the other  grades,
those numbers went down slightly.

The decrease in students saying they've used drugs or  been involved
in violence is the result of a variety of  prevention programs in the
district, said Randi Gibson,  director of student support services for
the district.

The survey results help district officials keep an eye  on potential
problem areas and decide which prevention  programs are needed, Gibson
said.

 From a health perspective, many more students reported  eating at
least five servings of fruits and vegetables  the day before the
survey, when compared with previous  years. For seventh-graders the
percentage of students  who said they had eaten fruits and vegetables
the day  before was 55 percent this year, up from 36 percent in  2001.

"That awareness of eating healthy seems to be being  picked up by the
kids," Gibson said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Derek