Pubdate: Tue, 30 Sep 2003 Source: Post-Standard, The (NY) Copyright: 2003, Syracuse Post-Standard Contact: http://www.syracuse.com/poststandard/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/686 Author: Jim Read NEW DARE STRESSES THINKING SKILLS Dewitt Teaches From Revised Curriculum DARE is changing. Following studies showing the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program is ineffective, the national organization that oversees DARE programs is testing a new curriculum aimed at seventh- and ninth-graders and has changed the program offered since 1983 to fifth- and sixth-graders. Jim Hildmann, an investigator and youth services officer with the DeWitt Police Department, has started teaching the new curriculum to fifth- and sixth-graders. "I really like the new way," he said. Instead of lecturing to pupils, he encourages them to think and discuss issues. The focus of the revised curriculum is on building decision-making skills to help the pupils solve difficult personal and social problems related to substance abuse, he said. "It's a whole different philosophy. It's a way to let them do more of the talking," he said. Hildmann teaches the program at Holy Cross School, Manlius Pebble Hill School and Jamesville-DeWitt Middle School. The new program uses much of the same information about drugs. But the information is now presented in 10 weeks instead of 17. The information also has been updated to reflect the changes in society. "This is a huge change for the better," Hildmann said. Class topics include tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, inhalants, social support networks, advertising of products, peer pressure, confidence and response styles. In the new format, pupils break into groups to discuss the topics, Hildmann said. A new and more colorful workbook has been created. The new curriculum for fifth- and sixth-graders comes as the national DARE program is studying a new program developed for seventh- and ninth-graders, said Michael Roona, executive director of Social Capital Development Corp. in Albany. Roona, a board member of Syracuse-based ReconsiDer, a nonprofit group that favors studying alternatives to the current national drug policy, said the problem with DARE is it doesn't reach youths at an age when they are likely to experiment with drugs. Roona serves on a national advisory committee that helped develop the new curriculum for older students. He also will help review the results of a five-year study of its effectiveness. The five-year pilot study in six cities in the United States will see if educating older students works better, he said. The study began in 2001, and students in the six cities receive drug education in seventh and ninth grades and are surveyed on drug use when they reach 11th grade. "Eleventh grade is a good time to see if the program works because heavy users haven't dropped out yet, so the statistics are more accurate," Roona said. The new program is being tested at 176 middle schools in New Orleans, Houston, Los Angeles, Newark, N.J., St. Louis and Detroit. The fifth- and sixth-grade program was changed in an effort to create something more effective for those age groups, Roona said. Some local school districts don't use the program. Manlius police teach at East Syracuse-Minoa schools but not in the Fayetteville-Manlius district, said Capt. Bill Bleyle. The program fits well into the health curriculum at ES-M, he said, but was duplicating what was being taught at F-M and was dropped after a few years, he said. Manlius police have been involved in DARE since 1990, he said. In Camillus, DARE was dropped in the 1998 school year in favor of a program developed by the police department, the West Genesee school district and the community. Like the new DARE program being tested for seventh- and ninth-graders, Camillus' Community Oriented Drug Education, or CODE, is taught at two grade levels, fifth and seventh, said Camillus police Capt. Thomas Winn. The idea is to reinforce in middle school the lessons taught in elementary school. Winn said he thinks it's a good idea to extend drug education into older grades. "We find that if kids make bad choices, it's in that first year of high school," he said. But Camillus is unlikely to adopt any new DARE programs even if the new seventh- and ninth-grade initiative proves to be effective. "We are so pleased with the (CODE) program," Winn said. "There's no way we'll go back to DARE." The homegrown program offers flexibility, Winn said, and can be changed as needed. But other police agencies are gearing up for the new DARE program. Money for DARE was cut from the Onondaga County Sheriff's Department budget last year, but school districts have been paying for the program where deputies have been teaching, said Sgt. Richard McCarron, who supervises the four deputies who teach DARE. The deputies are excited about the new curriculum, McCarron said. "You really hit on the key issues," he said. The department plans to teach the new curriculum at seven schools across the county this fall and possibly eight in the spring, depending on the requests of various districts. In Syracuse schools, fifth-graders instead of sixth-graders will get the new DARE program. Sixth-graders will be taught a new anti-gang program called Gang Resistance through Education And Training, or GREAT, said Lt. Rebecca Thompson, who heads the department's Family Services Division. The program is sponsored by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. The department was given a grant to begin the program. "We are going to try to initiate both programs," she said. GREAT, like the new DARE curriculum, focuses on decision-making. The instructors are still working on scheduling the classes in the city's elementary schools, she said. GREAT fits into a number of efforts by city police to reduce gang violence, she said. "It's not a replacement, but it's a good complement to DARE." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)