Pubdate: Tue, 07 Feb 2006 Source: Compass, The (CN NF) Column: You & Your Police Copyright: 2006 The Compass Contact: http://www.cbncompass.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3232 Author: Marc Trioreau, Cst. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) TEEN DRUG USE DOWN BY 19 PER CENT IN CANADA This is just in, just received a copy of it via e-mail and it is certainly a good indication that the work we are doing with the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program is working. The National Institute on Drug Abuse has released the 2005 Monitoring the Future survey. The proportion of students in Grades 8, 10 and 12 who use illicit drugs continued to decline in 2005. Over the past four years there has been a 19 per cent decrease in teenage drug use. This is real progress, and although we cannot take complete credit, there is no question that DARE is a key component of the efforts made to achieve these results. Bottom line: there are now 670,000 fewer teens using drugs than there were in 2001. Congratulations to all DARE officers for your dedication and commitment to helping the nation's children resist drugs and violence! Talking about DARE, I will be away soon to deliver the DARE training to some RCMP members from the Atlantic region. This is my first time training police to become DARE officers. I am looking forward to the experience. Upon my return I will start the DARE program in some of the schools in the area. We are lucky in this district that we have now five members trained as DARE officers. This means that several schools will receive the program this year. As a reminder here is a copy of the DARE curriculum and what we teach students in the classroom. Lesson 1: Purposes and Overview of DARE Program Students are introduced to the DARE program and the DARE Decision-making Model. Students practice skills used in decision-making. Lesson 2: Tobacco and You This lesson focuses on normative beliefs about the use of tobacco by youth. Tobacco facts are used to design tobacco-warning labels, which are shared with the class. Lesson 3: Smoke Screen Students apply tobacco and marijuana facts in a variety of situations using the DARE Decision-making Model. Students are introduced to the purpose of advertising. Lesson 4: Alcohol and You Students work through a normative belief activity about the use of alcohol by youth. Decision-making skills are reinforced as students work together solving a variety of situations. Lesson 5: The Real Truth Students are given the opportunity to examine alcohol ads in their environment and apply their learning in a relay race. Inhalants and their danger are examined. Lesson 6: Friendship Foundations In teams, students examine friendship and peer pressure in situational dilemmas using the DARE Decision-making Model. Lesson 7: Putting It Together Students work with partners to apply assertiveness skills in a think/pair/share methodology. Lesson 8: Personal Action Student teams practice decision-making skills as they examine the role of personal peer pressure in their lives. Lesson 9: Practice! Practice! Practice! Students have the opportunity to apply assertive refusal skills along with facts in a spiralling competition. Lesson 10: Culmination Students are given the opportunity to make a public statement about their choices to resist drugs and violence in a group assembly. Students receive DARE graduation certificates and celebrate their accomplishments. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake