Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jul 2004 Source: Republican, The (MA) Copyright: 2004 The Republican Contact: http://www.masslive.com/republican/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3075 Author: Ken Ross Note: Letters to the editor must include the writer's name, address and telephone number in order to be considered for publication. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) D.A.R.E. GETS UPGRADE FOR FALL AGAWAM - When city fifth-graders come to school this fall, a new drug-education awareness curriculum will be taught to students in the classroom. And according city officials and law enforcement personnel, the city-funded education program goes beyond simply teaching the hazards of drug use. The program teaches students how to make smart decisions throughout their lives. "If it (the program) saves one student, it's worth it," Mayor Richard A. Cohen said yesterday. The new fifth-grade curriculum is part of the long-established, sometimes-controversial nationwide Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. Created in 1984, the anti-drug awareness program known as DARE has been taught in schools throughout the country. Agawam has been teaching DARE classes in schools since 1986, according to police officer John T. Field, one of Agawam's two DARE instructors. Some critics have questioned the effectiveness of the program. An American Journal of Public Health study in 2002 found DARE had little influence on adolescent drug use. Funding for such programs has disappeared in many communities nationwide. Agawam used to receive some state and federal funding for its DARE program, according to police Chief Robert D. Campbell. The city now foots the bill for two police officers to run DARE programs in grades five, seven and nine. But Campbell and others defended DARE, saying the program is effective at educating children about the hazards of drug use. The program also enables students to become more familiar and comfortable around police officers. "The presence of police in schools can't be for naught," Campbell said. "It has to have an impact." Cohen agreed. "The best part of the program is the relationship between the students and the police officers," he said. Campbell and Field also praised the new fifth-grade DARE curriculum, which will be offered this fall. "The curriculum has been revised significantly," Campbell said. Rather than focusing simply on rejecting drugs, the program teaches students how to make smart decisions in all aspects of their lives, Field said. "It's a decision making model and hopefully they can apply it to other things." The new, fifth-grade curriculum was developed by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Akron in Ohio. New DARE curriculum for other grades is also being developed nationwide, Field said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin