Date: Fri 02-Feb-1996
Date: Fri 02-Feb-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
DARE-drugs-substance-abuse
Full Text:
DARE Program Focuses Its Efforts On The Seventh Grade
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
The DARE program has been working to educate students in Newtown about the
dangers of drug and alcohol abuse since 1989, when it was implemented in the
fifth grade.
Since September, DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) has also become part
of the curriculum for seventh graders to help reinforce what students learned
two years earlier. Middle school administrators requested the program be
brought in after realizing there was a dire need to reach students at that age
in an effort to reduce substance abuse at the high school level.
A recent survey among Newtown middle school students revealed a startling
difference between the way sixth graders think of drugs and those in eighth
grade.
"Something is happening between the sixth grade and eight grade. Something
drastic," explained Judy Blanchard head of the school district's Substance
Abuse Task Force at a recent Board of Education meeting.
Newtown police officers, teachers of the DARE classes, say, like many other
area towns, Newtown has a drug problem among its youth. They say in addition
to more well known drugs like marijuana and cocaine, police are seeing more
inhalant and heroine use, drugs never seen 10 years ago.
Inhalants are considered especially dangerous as kids often sniff household
chemicals, unaware of the dangers.
The officers believe that police involvement in the DARE program helps
youngsters to know that the community really does care.
Youth Officer Mike Kehoe has been teaching fifth graders to "just say no"
since the DARE program arrived in Newtown. He believes it has been effective
in educating students about the dangers of drugs.
"We feel good about it. We feel like we're doing our part," explained Officer
Kehoe. "We're making positive connections with kids. As long as you can do
that, you can't go wrong."
Officer Kehoe said the program effectively teaches independent thinking,
enabling young people to make decisions on their own.
Kristina Marciano, a junior at Newtown High School, was in fifth grade when
DARE first came to Newtown in 1989. She doesn't feel the program had much
effect on current high school students.
"I think when you're in fifth grade, it's not really an issue. If the kids are
going to do it, they're going to do it," she explained.
However, the NHS junior believes reinforcing the issue to seventh graders may
be more effective.
"In seventh grade, you're more exposed to what's out there so I think it would
be more real. Fifth grade is too early," she explained.
School Resource Officer Joe Rios has been teaching the program at the seventh
grade level this year.
"Seventh grade is a critical time for kids because it's when they begin to
feel the pressures," he said. "Kids are being asked to grow up earlier."
Seventh graders are being taught assertive resistance and how to deal with the
pressures of being offered alcohol and drugs.
According to a recent random survey taken by Dennis McShea of Smoke Signals ,
the Newtown High School newspaper, most youngsters first use drugs after being
offered them by a friend or while at a social gathering where there was drug
activity.
With all the work going on within the school to discourage drug use before
it's too late, both Officers Kehoe and Rios stress that it's the parents who
make the biggest difference. While they see some parents getting more involved
in their child's life, others tend to ignore their child's drug use or pretend
it's not happening.
"That's the parent that kills," said Officer Rios. "They're failing the
community as well as their own kid."
According to the Smoke Signals survey, 61 percent of the 100 students polled
use or have used illegal drugs. Of the seniors, 80 percent said they had used
drugs, while 76 percent of the juniors, 56 percent of the sophomores and 32
percent of the freshmen admitted to some form of drug use.
