Pubdate: Mon, 21 Oct 2002 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Copyright: 2002 Bergen Record Corp. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Author: Teresa McAleavy DANGEROUS MISPERCEPTIONS If more young people realized that many of their peers aren't drinking or taking drugs, fewer would feel compelled to experiment. "Students very often over-perceive alcohol and drug abuse among peers," says Pamela Negro, director of Rowan University's Center for Addiction Studies. "Social norms [an alcohol and drug prevention approach used by professionals] is about correcting those misperceptions so that young people make wiser choices." Negro will join other educators and law enforcement officials for a daylong conference on substance abuse prevention Friday at Waterloo Village in Stanhope. The "Party Drugs - Perception vs. Reality" conference will include discussions on social norms programs, ecstasy and other illicit drugs, and alcohol. The talks will be led by a health educator, DEA agent, and several drug prevention specialists, including Negro. "It's really about learning to ask young people to look at the reality of drug use among their peers," Negro says. "It's about helping them focus not on the one or two people at a party who are drunk or high and acting stupid, but on the majority who are non-drinkers or moderate drinkers." Negro says several studies show that many college students, particularly freshmen, believe their peers drink more than they do, which makes them drink even more. But if they know what their peers actually consume, they'll follow that social norm and drink, say, three or four beers in an evening rather than 10. "If we really ask them to look at the reality, rather than their own perceptions, we could effectively reduce the amount of heavy drinking and drug use that goes on," she says. Negro says the social norms' approach works best when it's promoted in ways that praise the achievements of young people and offers them drug-free social alternatives, such as comedy night at a coffeehouse. "It's sounds very simple, but we place a lot of positive posters around campus mentioning how many students are not using," she says. "It's important to take this kind of approach because we know lecturing and scare tactics don't work." The $10 workshop includes lunch. It is open to the public and offers professional educators four hours of continuing education credits. The conference is being sponsored by the Community Health Trust of Saint Clare's Hospital in Dover, the Verizon Foundation, and Morris County Prevention Is Key. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom