Pubdate: Wed, 07 Dec 2005
Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA)
Copyright: 2005 Los Angeles Newspaper Group
Contact:  http://www.ptconnect.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/244
Author: Kevin Butler, Staff writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

L.B. STUDENTS AFRAID OF VIOLENCE

LONG BEACH -- Alcohol, tobacco and marijuana use among Long Beach 
students remains lower than a few years ago, but many students 
continue to fear violence on campus, according to anonymous surveys 
of students this year.

The "California Healthy Kids Survey," given every two years, asked 
3,339 students about illegal substance use and school safety.

Between 2001 and 2003, students in the survey reported a noticeable 
drop in illegal substance use. Those drops largely held in 2005, as 
numbers remained relatively steady, said Robin Sinks, Long Beach 
Unified School District health curriculum leader.

"It's still in that continuing trend," she said. "What helps is that 
the drop (between 2001 and 2003) does not seem to be an anomaly. The 
2005 data has kind of confirmed what we saw happening two years ago."

But many students remain afraid of being a target for violence on 
school campus and have reported participating in fights.

The survey, which can be given only with parents' permission, is 
required by the state for all schools receiving federal and state 
anti-drug and anti-tobacco funds. Classrooms were randomly selected 
to receive the survey, and many of the questions were taken from a 
similar survey given nationally by the U.S. Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention.

The survey was administered to grades 11, 9, 7 and 5, which was added 
this year.

Although dropping, rates of alcohol use remained high in the surveys. 
Since 2001, the number of seventh-graders reporting that they drank 
at least one full glass of alcohol in 30 days prior to the survey 
fell 3 percentage points, to 15 percent in 2005.

The numbers for ninth grade during the same period fell 8 percentage 
points, to 26 percent. Eleventh-grade numbers fell 10 percentage 
points, to 34 percent in 2005. Seven percent of fifth-graders said 
they had consumed a full glass.

The figures declined slightly from 2003 levels. With the exception of 
seventh grade, the figures were below statewide numbers in 2003, the 
most recent data available. (Statewide and national numbers for 2005 
won't be released until next year.)

"I think alcohol has always been the tough one," said Sinks, "because 
it's legal for adults to consume, it's fairly accessible in every 
place from our local grocery stores to our home environment, and the 
social norm against drinking is not as great as tobacco and marijuana."

The share of students this year who reported tobacco use in the past 
30 days was 2 percent in fifth grade , 5 percent in seventh grade, 8 
percent in ninth grade and 13 percent in eleventh grade. Since 2001, 
tobacco use has declined in the ninth grade, but remained relatively 
steady in 11th and seventh grades, according to the survey.

This year's numbers remain near or below statewide figures in 2003.

Marijuana use has also declined in the surveys since 2001. The number 
of 11th-grade students who reported using marijuana within the past 
30 days fell from 24 percent to 14 percent in 2005. Ninth-grade 
numbers dropped from 21 percent to 11 percent, and seventh-grade 
figures fell three percentage points, to 6 percent.

The question wasn't asked of fifth-graders.

With the exception of seventh grade, marijuana use among Long Beach 
students was lower than the 2003 statewide figures.

Sinks attributes the substance-use declines to state and local 
prevention efforts. She also credits four health education programs 
in LBUSD whose effectiveness has been demonstrated in scientific studies.

The survey also measured students' attitudes about school safety. 
Nearly one-fifth of 11th-graders in the survey reported being 
involved in a physical fight within the past year. Twenty-three 
percent of ninth-graders and 32 percent of seventh-graders also said 
they had been in a fight.

The question was not asked of fifth-graders.

"While our physical fighting is going down over time, it's still 
high," Sinks said. "Certainly, we're concerned that students are not 
resolving conflicts nonviolently."

Many students are also afraid of being beaten up in school. Sixteen 
percent of eleventh-graders, 24 percent of ninth-graders and 29 
percent of seventh-graders said that sometime in the past year they 
had feared being beaten up.

Fifth-graders also weren't asked this question.

Students in the survey also shared how safe they feel on campus. 
Forty-six percent of seventh-graders responded that they felt "safe" 
or "very safe" on campus. About half of ninth-and tenth-graders felt 
the same way.

About 40 percent in grades 7, 9 and 11 reported in the survey that 
they felt neither safe nor unsafe on campus. That 
"neither-safe-unsafe" category, which Sinks interprets as meaning 
that the student hasn't thought about it very much, was new to the 
survey this year.

Less than 10 percent of eleventh-and ninth-grade students felt unsafe 
at school, as did 13 percent of seventh-graders.

Among fifth-graders, 77 percent said they felt safe most or all of the time.

Sinks said the district includes violence prevention in its curriculum.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman