Pubdate: Wed, 14 Apr 2004 Source: Craig Daily Press, The (CO) Copyright: 2004 The Craig Daily Press Contact: http://www.craigdailypress.com/site/feedback Website: http://www.craigdailypress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2334 Author: Rob Gebhart SIXTH-GRADERS GRADUATE DARE After a year of self-esteem building and encouragement to refuse drugs and alcohol, Craig Intermediate School's sixth-grade class has graduated the Craig Police Department DARE program. The DARE (Drug Awareness Resistance Education) class is part of the health curriculum at the intermediate school, and it is taught by Carolyn Wade and Jesse McAvoy, school resource officers, and Deputy Liz Campbell, a member of the detention staff at the Public Safety Center. It's a common misconception that the program is just an anti-drug lecture, Wade said. DARE provides students the opportunity to have positive interactions with police officers, and much of the curriculum is based on raising students' self-esteem as a proactive measure against drug use. "It enables us to interact with the kids. We talk about how to stand tall and the eight ways to say no," Campbell said. Often, Wade said she doesn't find out what kind of impact the program has had on a student until after the class has ended, and parents come to tell her what sort of effect the class has had on their children. This year, essay awards were presented to Shelby Haughey and Katherine Cork, who wrote on what they learned in the class and how it affected them. Cork wrote about smoking, and Haughey wrote a wide-ranging essay that mentioned how the class had made her more aware of how she carried herself. DARE increased her self-confidence and taught her to be more aware of her surroundings, she wrote. "It's not something you do just as a sixth-grader. You do this for the rest of your life," Campbell said. Children who carry themselves with confidence are less likely to be offered drugs, Wade said. Students are encouraged to associate with others who share similar viewpoints, and they are taught that though some people drink, smoke or do drugs, it isn't the norm. To graduate from the DARE program, students are required to participate in class, write an essay and incur no drug, tobacco or alcohol violations during the course of the year. Parents have the option to sign their children out of the DARE class, and some parents have taken that option, sometimes based on the mistaken belief that the school resources officers are in the classroom to gather information on students' families. In class, students are instructed to say, "I know someone," to protect family members' confidentiality, Wade said. The police will act only on a student's information if the student has implied they will injure themselves or if the information involves child abuse, Wade said. In the elementary schools, DARE focuses primarily on safety. Wade said the police department is hoping to implement a DARE program soon in the middle school. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart