Pubdate: Mon, 17 Mar 2003 Source: Johnson City Press (TN) Copyright: 2003 Johnson City Press and Associated Press Contact: http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1983 Author: Robert Houk AREA DARE PROGRAM PRAISED ELIZABETHTON - As DARE prepares to celebrate its 20th anniversary this year, some pundits are questioning the effectiveness of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program that has become a fixture in many of the nation's elementary classrooms. While critics say DARE has failed to actually reduce drug use among youngsters, teachers and students at one Elizabethton city school say they are convinced the program has been a success locally. "I have taught here for 12 years, and I firmly believe DARE has been beneficial to a lot of children," Cindy Estep, a fifth grade teacher at Harold McCormick Elementary School, said last week. Estep said Sgt. Danny Hilbert - an officer with the Elizabethton Police Department who teaches the DARE course - takes and "open and honest approach" in informing students of the real effects of drugs. "Despite what they see about drugs and alcohol use in the movies and TV, it is not always funny or glamorous," Estep said. "Whether DARE works in the long run, is a decision these students will have to make for themselves. But you can't wait until they are 16 years old before you start talking to them about drugs and alcohol." Rikki Pritchard, 11, is among the fifth graders at Harold McCormick who are in the final weeks of their first DARE program. Pritchard, quoting from statistics cited in her DARE workbook, said most of her classmates will refrain from taking drugs and alcohol. "But 20 percent will do it just to get their minds off their troubles," she said. "DARE has influenced me not to take drugs." Her classmate, Courtney Smith, said DARE is just one of the many influences that have convinced her to avoid drugs and alcohol. The 11-year-old said her family has also been a factor in that regard. "DARE teaches you to be drug-free," she said. "If you are not drug-free, you won't be able to get a good education, go to college or have a nice job." Smith and Pritchard are just two of the 26 million children in the United States who now participate in the DARE program. The curriculum of the 10-week course - which was developed by educators and is taught by trained police officers - stresses personal responsibility and teaches students techniques for resisting peer pressure to use drugs and alcohol. Advocates of the program - which was created by former Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates in 1983 - say there are more than 30 independent studies supporting the effectiveness of DARE. The most recent study is one published in the Journal of the National Medical Association. It suggests that students who participate in the DARE program are five times less likely to start smoking compared to youngsters who do not. DARE has a number of testimonials from teachers, parents and police officers touting the success of the program posted on its Web site, www.dare.com. The nonprofit organization also points to studies like the one conducted by a Ohio State University researcher who found that 97 percent of the teachers he surveyed in Illinois in 2001 gave the DARE program high marks. The Illinois study also found that 92.8 percent of parents believe DARE effectively teaches children to say no to drugs and violence. A growing number of national organizations, however, are questioning the effectiveness of the DARE program. One such group is the Drug Reform Coordination Network - a coalition of more than 21,000 drug law reform activists, health care professionals and educators - which believes DARE has been unsuccessful in meeting its goals. "All the major research on the effectiveness of DARE shows that it has no impact on the rate of drug use by children who go through DARE training," the organization states on its Web site, www.drcnet.org. DRCNet also cites a 1993 study by the Research Triangle Institute and the National Institute of Justice which suggested a statistical analysis of all DARE research has found the program has had "a limited to essentially non-existent effect" on drug use. "The final edition of the largest evaluation of the DARE program has concluded that the anti-drug program does not reduce drug use, and in at least the category of pot, the DARE graduates smoked more frequently than the control," DRCNet concludes on its Web site. Such criticisms, however, were not on the minds of DARE students at Harold McCormick last week. Instead, the students had number of questions for the two 17-year-old visitors seated at the front of their DARE class. "How many of your friends use drugs," was one of the questions posed to Sarah Smith, a senior at Elizabethton High School, and Evan Lindauer, an EHS junior. The two are graduates of the DARE program who have been tapped to serve as role models to their younger classmates. Lindauer said it is not always easy to spot a fellow student who is using drugs. "It's not really obvious," he said. "There are probably more (taking drugs) than you think. Some people hide it very well." As for himself, Lindauer said he has never been directly confronted by the drug issue. "All my really close friends are drug-free," said Lindauer, who is a member of the track, swimming and football teams at the high school. Likewise, Smith said she and her close friends are simply too busy with their school work and extracurricular activities to be involved with drugs. Smith, a standout on the Lady Cyclones basketball team, said she tries to be a positive role model for her classmates. "If I found a student taking drugs, I wouldn't stop spending time with them," Smith said. "I would try to influence them not to use drugs." Hilbert said he is delighted to hear such statements from former students. Smith is a graduate of the first class that Hilbert taught at Harold McCormick some eight years ago. "When it comes to the Elizabethton School System, there is no doubt in my mind that DARE had made a difference and continues to make a difference in the lives of these students," Hilbert said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens