Pubdate: Sun, 05 Mar 2006 Source: Truth, The (Elkhart, IN) Section: Pg A5 Copyright: 2006 Truth Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.etruth.com/Contact.aspx?ID=Editorial Website: http://www.etruth.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1706 Author: Patricia Davis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) EXCEPTIONAL EDUCATORS: FRIENDLY MESSAGE FINDS FAVOR Deputy Has Won Fans For Work With Students Words To Live By Elkhart County Patrolman Craig Polachek thanks a class at Oxbow Elementary School for their hard work in the D.A.R.E. program.Photo: Fred Flury / The Truth Craig Polachek dares anyone to change his beliefs about Drug Abuse Resistance Education. A recent D.A.R.E. graduation ceremony at a local elementary school was clearly a big deal to the students, teachers and many parents in attendance. As students entered the assembly room, there was a happy, expectant tension. Later, it became clear this was because Polachek, an officer with Elkhart County Sheriff's Department who teaches the D.A.R.E. program in several schools, is admired and respected by the students he dares to resist drugs. Several students all competed to answer questions about Polachek. "He's cool!" "He's fun!" "He gave us all nicknames ..." This seemed especially important to these students, also variously known as "Einstein," "Snowman," "Socks," "Sunshine Head" and "Holmes." Most telling was the answer to the question, "Why will you remember what he taught you five years from now?" The response came with surprising intensity and seriousness, "Because he taught us." The mutual respect between students and teacher/officer is the key element in the apparent success of Polachek's work. "Police aren't always able to make friends with kids," Polachek told the graduates. "I'm so glad you are my friends." Sara Hetler, a parent at the D.A.R.E. ceremony who saw her third child complete the program with Polachek, said, "I have two older daughters. One is a sophomore, one an eighth grader. They still talk about the classes they had with him." This ongoing influence witnesses to something else Polachek said to the students. "There is a final test, for this (D.A.R.E.) class. It is one you will take many times. Can you live drug free? Not just today, but when you are in high school, and later, when you are adults? Can you set the standards? Can you boldly change the attitudes of those around you?" As part of the course, students write essays about what they learn. Comments from those essays reveal amazing anecdotes, as well as insight: * "... Two guys asked us to smoke a cigarette. Because of D.A.R.E., it (sic) gave me the strength to say NO to them ..." * "With all this information, I am sure I will be able to make the right decisions." Another graduate spoke articulately about her experiences with her D.A.R.E. teacher -- Polachek. "It was really good. He told us specific things about what drugs will do. He added humor. We acted things out, like how it would be like if a drug dealer came to us. He went over it a lot and made sure we knew." Polachek was asked about the ongoing success, or non-success, of the D.A.R.E. program. After many years, there is still a definite drug problem in our community. His response was clear and passionate. "It is as if there was a big pile of garbage in our midst. D.A.R.E. is one way of taking it out. Others keep bringing it in. If we weren't working to take it out, that pile of garbage would only keep getting bigger," he said. "I tell the kids that if they have to make choices. If they see their dad smoking, it doesn't mean he's a bad guy," Polachek said. "But it also doesn't mean they have to make the same choice." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman