Pubdate: Fri, 05 May 2000 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2000 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: The People's Forum, P.O. Box 191, Raleigh, N.C. 27602 Fax: (919)829-4872 Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ RESISTING DARE Drug Abuse Resistance Education sounded like a good idea at the time: Send police officers in uniform into classrooms of fifth- and sixth-graders to describe the dangers of drug and alcohol use they see out on the street every day and persuade young people to abstain. Two decades of experience, though, have shown that DARE wasn't such a good idea after all. Not that intentions weren't the best -- but the program evidently just doesn't work. Still, some schools in 95 percent of North Carolina's districts disregard the conclusions of researcher after researcher and continue opening doors to DARE officers. That stubbornness is beginning to hurt. DARE may not cost the schools (as opposed to police departments) money, but it costs students' time, and wasting time feeds the perception that administrators are lax stewards of school resources. Fifth- and sixth-graders need math, science and reading. While they might need the skills to resist drugs, they don't need a program shown to have no lasting effect on drug use. As precious as class time is in a 180-day school year, pulling students out of math to listen to DARE officers hardly makes sense. School administrators who insist that DARE is effective in the face of considerable evidence to the contrary make it seem that they don't care whether a program works or not, if they're already using it and it doesn't cost the schools money. Voters harboring suspicions about such attitudes cast enough "no" votes last June to defeat a bond issue for new schools in Wake County. For the sake of all children consigned to DARE in crowded classrooms, let's use their time better. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg