Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2003 Source: Daily Telegram, The (WI) Copyright: 2003 The Daily Telegram Contact: http://www.superior-wi.com/placed/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1348 Author: Maria Lockwood, The Daily Telegram Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) YOUTH GRANTS HELP OUT LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICTS A state mini-grant brought the message of Red Ribbon Week to students in the Maple School District this year. A similar grant is at work helping students mediate problems for their peers at Central and East Middle Schools. Yet another will bring families together for a night of fun and education at Solon Springs School. Student-planned projects to prevent alcohol, tobacco and other drug abuse are sharing about $200,000 in state funding for activities that have been or will be held during the 2002-2003 school year. In Douglas County, the following programs were funded: Northwestern Elementary School Peer Helpers in the Maple School District -- $997; Northwood School Students Offering Support (SOS) -- $1,000; Solon Springs School Peer Helpers -- $1,000; and peer mediation at Central and East middle schools in the Superior School District -- $1,000 and $900, respectively. Northwestern fifth-grade students stretched their dollars to cover a full week of education: CLIMB theater gave a presentation on bullying to elementary school students; Middle school students received Youth Against Tobacco training; Students at Northwestern High School put red ribbons on car antennas to remind students to drive responsibly; Iron River Elementary School students decorated grocery bags with drug-free messages. "It went great," said Erika Kaufman, a counselor at NES who helped students coordinate the events and apply for the grant. "We had a great response from the students and teachers." It was the first time Kaufman, who has been with the district for four years, remembers Northwestern students celebrating Red Ribbon Week. "It was a lot of work," she said, but "It's something we'd definitely like to do in the future." The Solon event, which takes place March 13, will bring families together for food, fun, prizes and a little education. Community agencies will have booths set up to inform parents about the services they offer. Counselor Marty Gibbons said the family night is a chance "to see how the school connects with the larger community." Members of the school's peer helpers group planned the event. State Superintendent Elizabeth Burmaster noted that Wisconsin is in its 14th year of youth mini-grants for student-led projects and that comprehensive school health programs are much more successful when youth are involved. "Our young people understand what they want and need to successfully avoid the pitfalls of alcohol, drug and tobacco use; violence; unsafe driving; and other risky ventures," she said, "and research supports the benefit and work of student-led projects." Student groups wrote 547 grants, of which 223 received funding. Funding priority went to projects that had a high degree of educational value and would help students make connections between alcohol, tobacco and other drug abuse (ATODA) issues and other youth risk behaviors such as AIDS/HIV, violence and teen pregnancy. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk