Pubdate: Sat, 09 Dec 2006
Source: Cadillac News (MI)
Copyright: 2006 Cadillac News
Contact:  http://www.cadillacnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3750
Author: Rick Charmoli, Cadillac News

A TIME FOR CHANGE: DRUG, ALCOHOL SURVEY SHOW NEED FOR  COMMUNITY
INTERVENTION

CADILLAC - Half the seniors in Cadillac High School  said they drank 
alcohol in the last month. Of those  Cadillac seniors who completed 
the survey, 32 percent  admitted to using marijuana.

Danette Crozier wasn't surprised by the results, but  she hopes 
members of the community are.

Prior to becoming a counselor and Safe and Drug Free  Schools 
coordinator for Cadillac Area Public Schools,  Crozier used to work 
at a prevention and treatment  center. She has a degree in substance 
abuse  prevention/intervention and treatment. That's why when  the 
results of a recent drug survey came out showing a  majority of CAPS 
junior high and high school students  had at least tried alcohol and 
drugs, she wasn't  surprised.

"What surprised me the most about the survey was  that I wasn't 
surprised. The data the survey results  showed is very consistent 
with every high school in the  United States," she said. "The hope is 
that we  embrace the problem as a community. It's not just a  CAPS 
problem. It's a Cadillac community problem."

WHAT IT SHOWED

The rise in marijuana and binge drinking were the two  areas that 
were the most discouraging on survey,  according to CAPS 
Superintendent Paul Liabenow.

Liabenow said he would support an initiative that would  help to 
reduce consumption but right now he said he  does not know of one 
that has led to success. The  district, however, is still looking.

"I was more discouraged to see the numbers are  increasing and that 
leads me to believe we need to try  different approaches. If what we 
are doing today is not  working, we need to try new ones," Liabenow said.

The statistics in this survey should open eyes, Crozier  said. In her 
opinion, it should do so because about 30  percent of last year's 
senior class reported drinking  at home and their parents were aware 
of what they were  doing.

"I understand that some parents are thinking,  'at least they are 
safe' but adolescents cannot  distinguish drinking at home with their 
parents or at a  friend's house," she said. "It's a mixed message. 
The message to send to teens is it's illegal, harmful  and won't be tolerated."

Liabenow also said that it is important for people to  know that good 
kids sometimes make bad choices and are  entitled to support. 
Likewise, he said the district and  community need parent support to 
curb alcohol and drug  use.

"More regular supervision is necessary. As a  parent of four I know 
that it is easier said than  done," Liabenow said.  "Together, 
though, I am  confident that we can make a difference for our youth."

WHAT OTHER DISTRICTS ARE DOING

Other schools within the area also are concerned about  the use of 
drugs and alcohol by students.

McBain Rural Agricultural School Superintendent Daniel  Bachman said 
the district did not give its students a  survey but results of 
Cadillac's survey were not  surprising to him either. That being 
said, he also said  accuracy of surveys such as the one done by 
Cadillac should be taken into consideration.

"Sometimes, I wonder about the accuracy of the  survey. It is 
dependant on how seriously the students  take it," he said. "We know 
it (drugs and alcohol)  is an issue. We hear about it all the time. I 
think it  is good special attention is given to the problem."

Other districts such as Mesick Consolidated Schools,  Cadillac 
Heritage Christian, Evart Public Schools and  Reed City Area Public 
Schools also did not distribute a  drugs and alcohol survey. Some of 
the reasons for not  giving the survey included various 
programs/speakers  already in place as well as size of the school.

Although it is currently not giving surveys to its  students, Reed 
City Superintendent Steven Westhoff said  giving one would be worthwhile.

"Substance abuse is an issue and it already exists  in Reed City. I 
don't know the degree but I assume it  changes from year to year," 
Westhoff said.

Lake City Area Schools, however, is in the process of  giving two 
surveys to its students.

The first survey focuses on violence and was given to  students in 
grades four through 12 while the second  survey focuses on drugs and 
alcohol and was given to  students in grades six through 12, 
according to Lake  City Curriculum Director Carol Thola.

"We are trying to get a baseline. It will help us  assess and see 
what programs are needed and let us know  how effective our current 
programs are," Thola said.

Thola said the upper elementary, junior high and high  schools are 
all individually administering the surveys.  Complete results will 
not be available until closer to  the end of the year.

SEEING THE RESULTS

Although Crozier and Liabenow shared the results of the  survey with 
the community at a Lunch and Learn program  at the Department of 
Human Services Friday, if a person  is interested in seeing the 
results they are welcome to  go to CAPS Central Office, 421 S. 
Mitchell St., to see them.

Your local connection

HOW TO START A CONVERSATION AND HOW TO TALK TO YOUR  TEENS:

- - Keep your best motives in mind: Before talking to  your teenager 
about drugs, pause for a moment and ask  the focusing question: What 
do I really want? This  pause can help you get your motives in check 
and move  from simply "keeping the peace" through silence to  being a 
powerful influence on your teen.

- - Confront with facts, not judgments: When you present  the facts, 
you obligate your teen to respond to the  information. When you use 
judgments or accusatory  language, it appears you intend simply to 
humiliate or  punish, and your teen feels no obligation to engage in 
the conversation.

- - Make it feel safe: State what you don't intend and  what you do 
intend: "I want to reassure you that I  have no desire to make your 
decisions for you, or to  cut you off from having a happy life. I 
want to be  supportive of you, and I want to influence choices 
you  might make that I believe will hurt you."

- - Make it feel safe: Be flexible about the time of the  talk, but not 
about whether you talk. Control is a huge  issue for teens. Sometimes 
parents provoke an  unnecessary confrontation by demanding that 
conversations be on their terms and their time frame.  It's best to 
try to engage your child in dialogue by  respecting their preferences 
about when to talk.

- - Make it feel safe: Create a "safety reserve" by  creating safety 
even when there are no problems.  Communicating respect, praising 
small positive signs,  "catching" them when they're being good, and 
showing an interest in your teen's life will help him  or her feel 
much safer talking to you when problems  emerge.

- - Discuss, agree on and stick with boundaries: If you  talk about 
rules around curfews, choice of friends, and  your expectations of 
knowing where your teen is before  he or she is tempted to make bad 
choices, it is much  easier to enforce them later. Then when 
boundaries are  violated, hold your teen accountable consistently. If 
it's a boundary, it should always be a boundary.

- - Evaluate the dialogue: You're aiming for a two-way,  face-to-face 
conversation that gives your teen room to  disagree with you and 
communicate a different  point-of-view. After the conversation, ask 
yourself who  did most of the talking. If your teen didn't do at 
least 25 percent of it, you didn't ask enough questions  - or didn't 
create enough safety to allow your teen to  participate fully.

- - The most important thing to remember when it comes to  talking 
about difficult subjects like drinking and  drugs: It's not a 
five-minute "talk" - it's about  building an ongoing dialogue.

Source: theantidrug.com

What people can do:

- - First and foremost, parents need to communicate with  their children.

- - Mentor a students/teen.

- - Support local prevention and treatment programs.

- - Stay educated on the topic.

Source: Danette Crozier, CAPS counselor and Safe and  Drug Free 
Schools Coordinator.

Student use in the last month:

- - 50 percent of high school seniors (class of 2006)  reported 
drinking in the past month.

- - 35 percent of seniors (class of 2006) reported  getting drunk while 
only 5 percent of eighth-graders  and 10 percent of sophomores 
reported getting drunk.

- - 32 percent of seniors reported recent marijuana use -  12 percent 
higher than the national average.

Marijuana trends:

- - The number of students using marijuana is increasing.  Nearly as 
many students report using marijuana as  cigarettes.

- - Students report that getting marijuana is easy or  fairly easy to get.

Source: American Drug and Alcohol Survey results for  Cadillac Area 
Public Schools.
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MAP posted-by: Elaine