Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jun 2002 Source: Terrace Standard (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Terrace Standard Contact: http://www.terracestandard.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1329 Author: Jennifer Lang UNION SLAMS DRUG EDUCATION PLAN THE APPROVAL of a parent-championed anti-drug program raises troubling questions on who decides what children are taught in the classroom, the Terrace teachers' union says. The school board approved the program last week, after hearing a final pitch from a parent group, prompting the union representing teachers in Terrace, Kitwanga, Hazelton and Stewart to file a grievance. In doing so, the board ended years of debate between local teachers and proponents of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or DARE, Program. The Terrace and District Teachers' Union has long argued the 16-lesson program, taught inside classrooms by uniformed police officers, violates the collective agreement. "Our position is you need a qualified teacher to teach the DARE curriculum," TDTU president Frank Rowe said. "You can come into our schools any time you like. You just don't come in and do our jobs." Rowe said the board's June 4 decision also violates the School Act because it means an outside group is being allowed to determine what will be taught inside classrooms. TDTU president-elect Richard Eckert said the decision raises concerns about community groups imposing curriculum on schools. "During this whole debate, teachers have been coming up with rational and reasonable arguments," Eckert said. What happened last week, he said, just proves people who yell the loudest get their way. "They said, 'We want it, so we're going to get it'," Eckert said. "That's what happened." A District Parent Advisory Council delegation asked the board to implement DARE, even though the district's education committee failed to endorse the program May 15. Instead, the committee recommended the district develop its own drug and alcohol awareness program. DPAC representatives came away from that three-hour-long discussion determined to push for DARE, treasurer Linda Marshall recently told the Terrace Standard. "We have very strongly said this is what we want," she said. "The union is saying 'No'." Board vice chair Peter King moved to implement DARE where the necessary resources - trained DARE instructors - are available. The Terrace RCMP detachment currently has two members who have received the DARE training, meaning it can be offered here as soon as September. "My feeling on the DARE program is anything is better than nothing," King said, adding the district does have some programs, but he doesn't think they go far enough. "Until something better comes along, I think we should proceed with it," he said. "At the end of the day it's up to the board to make a decision. You always hope that you have a buy-in from everyone." The DARE program was developed in Los Angeles to deal with drug and gang-related problems in schools. It's now expanded to nearly 30 countries across the world and is taught in neighbouring school districts. Two private schools in Terrace, Centennial Christian School and Veritas School, have used the DARE program. It's targeted at the Grade 5 and 6 level and covers drug and alcohol use, violence, and issues of self esteem, topics the teachers' union says are in some cases covered by existing initiatives. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth