Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2003 Source: Newport Daily News, The (RI) Copyright: 2003. The Newport Daily News. Contact: http://www.newportdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1808 Author: Anne Kumar Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) OFFICIALS TO GIVE DRUG-ABUSE PROGRAM A MAKEOVER PORTSMOUTH - A peer education program that caused controversy last year may be getting a facelift next month. School administrators are planning to take another look at the Teens Leading Children program that has been in the Portsmouth school system for 14 years, according to Director of Elementary Education Mary E. Foley. TLC is a drug-abuse prevention program that puts high school students in fourth-grade classrooms at the town's three elementary schools to talk about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. The high school students must sign a pledge not to use alcohol, drugs or tobacco during the month of October while the program is going on. But Foley said not everyone at the elementary schools is happy with the program. She said surveys taken after the program last October showed that some principals and teachers at the elementary school level are unhappy with aspects of the program. Surveys have been taken in the past, but Foley said this year was the first time she saw the data. "We met in June and decided we wanted to look at redesigning it," Foley said. The program was in the spotlight when it was created in 1989 because it was the first of its kind in the town, program coordinator and school nurse teacher Nancy Souza said. But during the past school year, the program caused controversy when a senior was told she could not participate unless she covered her hair - which was partially dyed purple - and took out her lip ring. School officials caught flack for the decision because the student, Julie Cahill, participated in the program the previous year with a nose ring and dyed hair and no one complained. But school officials said there were different expectations about appearance at the elementary school than at the high school. School officials say the decision to rework the program is based on ongoing problems, not the controversy of last year. They attribute their decisions to scheduling conflicts, funding difficulties and a desire to focus on broader health topics with professionals teaching the subjects. According to a memo from Foley to several school officials, the principals want to use staff to teach health-related curriculum because it provides "a more comprehensive instructional model with continuity." The memo also states that the "increased accountability for student achievement in literacy and mathematics warrants a critical review of interruptions to classroom time." Traditionally, the high school students would come to the elementary schools in the morning, but Foley said that continues to be an inconvenience for the teachers and takes away from other subjects. The memo mentions holding a one-day workshop where high school students come in to talk to the fourth-graders for an hour or two about "their strategies for remaining substance-free." "It's not gone," Foley said of the program. "It's just being revisited." Mary Ann Martin, chairwoman of the Portsmouth Substance Abuse Prevention Task Force, said the program is valuable to the community. "I'm disappointed to see it completely removed, if it is, but not changed," Martin said, adding that the program is more than a decade old. "I know there are real concerns ... But we can look at what is valuable, what still can be valuable and what can be changed." Another problem facing the program is that the funding source is beginning to dry up, said Caroline "Bunny" Miller, coordinator for the Portsmouth Substance Abuse Prevention Task Force. Next school year may be the last time the funds are available, she said. The program, which costs about $800 a year to run, is paid for by a combination of funds that the task force oversees. But funding mainly comes from Title IV money, which is based on the population and composition of a community. "I'm hoping to, through some other source, find funding for the program next year," she said. No matter what happens to the program, Souza said the students will get the same information because the program is based on the health-education requirements. "The lessons are the same; it just means more when the teenagers say it," Souza said, adding that national studies have shown that peer education is worthwhile. "The high school students tell the kids, 'I don't do drugs, I don't drink, but I still have fun and I'm still popular,' and that message gets across." Miller said that prevention, which is the focus of the program, is a matter of trying to change attitudes and people's views of societal norms. Miller said the TLC program is the first time students are taught about the dangers of drugs, alcohol and tobacco. "This is where we start to influence them so when they have choices to make, they make the right choices," Miller said. Souza also said the fourth-graders are not the only ones who benefit from the program. "The self-esteem of the teens has improved by doing it," she said. "Some of them even want to become teachers." Miller said TLC is just one of many prevention programs students will encounter while they are in the Portsmouth school system. Programs such as D.A.R.E., life skills lessons and programs that target the at-risk population in the various schools are part of the education the children receive. "Together all of these things are effective," she said. "There's no one single thing that works. There's no magic pill." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk