Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2005 Source: Johnson County Sun, The (KS) Copyright: 2005 The Johnson County Sun Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=1459 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3991 Note: Articles have feedback links for LTE submission Author: Arley Hoskin, Staff Writer SHAWNEE MISSION GETS DRUG PREVENTION GRANT Shawnee Mission School District Is Not Daring Students To Say No To Drugs With the help of a $99,863 renewable grant the district is teaching students how to say no. The federal government issued the Drug-Free Communities Program grant to Johnson County's Regional Prevention Center for use in the Shawnee Mission School District. Shawnee Mission is one of 176 districts to receive the grant. The district will use the money to implement Project Alert in seventh-grade classrooms. Project Alert is a tested, effective drug prevention curriculum, said Janine Gracy, regional prevention center director. "They were a great grant candidate because we can really show a difference once (Project Alert's) been implemented," Gracy said. Gracy hired a full-time prevention coordinator to oversee the program. Project Alert facilitators will train seventh-grade teachers from Antioch and Trailridge middle schools in the spring and the schools will pilot the program in the fall of 2006. "(Project Alert) will provide us an opportunity to instruct students in a different method," said Leigh Anne Neal, the district's director of public information and communications. The program teaches refusal skills, role modeling and goal setting, Gracy said. Previous programs, such as Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.), taught students about drugs. Project Alert focuses on ways to avoid drugs rather than information about drugs. "It is not about holding up a bag of marijuana and saying 'this is marijuana,'" Gracy said. "That is not what this curriculum is about." Communities and families are included in Project Alert's curriculum. "There is a portion of this curriculum where the kids will take a work sheet home," Gracy said. The program requires students to ask their parents about ways to avoid drugs. Parents are encouraged to share their personal experiences with their children. "Parents need to be talking to their children about these issues whether they are comfortable or not," Gracy said. Gracy chose seventh-grade because peer influence is strong in that age group. "We know as adolescents their No. 1 risk factor for the likelihood of substance abuse are friends that use," Gracy said. Implementing the program in seventh grade also allows the prevention center to track the progress of students. The grant is renewable for five years, totaling about $500,000. Since teachers lead the curriculum, Project Alert can be sustained when the grant money runs out, Gracy said. "We've planned this program out knowing that we have to be able to show sustainability in the future," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth