Pubdate: Wed, 08 Feb 2006 Source: Tahoe World (Tahoe City, CA) Copyright: 2006 Tahoe World Contact: http://apps.tahoe-world.com/forms/letter/ Website: http://www.tahoe-world.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/528 Author: Kara Fox Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) DARING TO DO RIGHT Kings Beach Elementary fifth graders and their parents gathered in the school gym last Friday for fun and cake to celebrate their graduation from the 10-week drug abuse prevention program known as D.A.R.E. "It was really fun and amazing. I learned a lot," said 10-year-old Olivia Duner, a first place D.A.R.E. essay winner. "Our parents tell us not to do drugs, but they don't say why. [In D.A.R.E.] we actually got to learn why not to do drugs." Indeed, the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program is designed to teach kids about the effects of drugs and alcohol, the consequences of abuse and the skills for resisting peer pressure to experiment with drugs, alcohol and tobacco. D.A.R.E. was founded in 1983 in Los Angeles and is now taught in more than 75 percent of the nation's school districts, according to the program's Web site. Tahoe D.A.R.E. Officer Stephanie Novick, who just completed teaching her first classes after taking over the program from Russ Potts, said she focuses on the effects of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana and inhalants with the fifth graders. "My job as a D.A.R.E. officer is to give them the ammo to make the right decisions," Novick, a Placer County Sheriff's deputy, said. "It is more than a drug or alcohol class. You have to teach them about violence and peer pressure." Novick, who had to take a two week class in Beverly Hills to teach D.A.R.E., said she tries to make the class fun and interactive for the students. She uses facts, statistics and graphs to make her points, like that alcohol can cause bad breath, cigarettes contain 200 poisons and marijuana causes short term memory loss. Novick then teaches the fifth graders how to apply the facts into every day life and how to say no. It was obvious at Friday's D.A.R.E. graduation that the kids are getting it. "Learning to say 'no' is the most important thing," 10-year-old Lauren McLaughlan noted after the ceremony. Her friend, Maddie Johnson, 10, said she was glad she was taught how to deal with peer pressure. To reinforce the message of drug prevention, Novick brought in two young speakers to talk to the classes during the graduation. Novick's own son, 14-year-old Michael Novick who attends Alder Creek Middle School in Truckee, read a poem by a Meth addict and reiterated the importance of staying off drugs. Jake McDermott, an 18-year-old North Tahoe High School senior, told of his quest to keep away from drugs and alcohol. "I was like all of you. I went to school here. I went through what all of you did. Once you get to high school, it is a lot different," McDermott, a cross country runner, said. "Hanging out with kids who don't do drugs - you can't go wrong. ...I have these medals because I found something I love. You can't afford to lose your life to a pill or a drink." Novick knows she may not be able to keep every child off drugs and alcohol, but she thinks D.A.R.E. helps reach children that may not otherwise hear the message about staying off drugs. "You never know who you are going to touch," she said. "It's a great program. I've built a bridge and friendship between the sheriff's department and the schools." A D.A.R.E. BBQ and golf tournament will be held May 7 at the Old Brockway Golf Course in Kings Beach. The cost is $200 for a team of four. There will be awards and a raffle. Contact Stephanie Novick at (530) 581-6300 to participate. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom