Pubdate: Fri, 23 Mar 2007 Source: Linton Daily Citizen (IN) Copyright: 2007 Linton Daily Citizen. Contact: http://www.dailycitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3277 Author: Halea Franklin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) LINTON POLICE, STUDENTS CELEBRATE DARE PROGRAM Thursday night was an evening of celebration as this year's Linton-Stockton Elementary fifth-graders became the school's first to graduate from the DARE - Drug Awareness Resistance and Education - program. Linton Police Department officer Debbie McDonald, who spent 13 weeks teaching the DARE program to Linton-Stockton fifth-graders, said 117 students completed the program and graduated. To graduate from the program, McDonald said, the students had to write a DARE report. Every student completed the report, she said. In the report, students had to write about their DARE experience - what they learned, what was the personal topic to them, what they got the most out of during the 13-week course. "Some of them made you cry," McDonald said of the reports. McDonald said the students took the assignment of writing the report seriously. Out of the 117 students, the reports written by Stormi Alsman and Dalton Lewis were chosen as the best. "I did not judge those reports. They were sent off and judged by someone else," McDonald noted. Linton Police Department Chief Troy Jerrell said the reports the students wrote were wonderful. "To hear these kids' stories is touching to say the least," Jerrell said. "To read through these letters and see what they had to say about the program, their lives and what they've learned from the program is absolutely wonderful." Alsman was also chosen as honorable mention in the state's DARE poster contest. For the contest, students had to make a poster including DARE and the Indiana Pacers. One Indiana student was chosen as the winner, while 10 were chosen as honorable mention. Alsman received a free ticket to see the Pacers and Chicago Bulls play this weekend. She also gets to go onto the floor before the game and meet some of the players. McDonald thanked the businesses in the community for their support of the DARE program. "We had an overwhelming amount of donations from the local business and if we didn't have that money, there's no way I could've done the graduation," McDonald said. Looking back in the program, McDonald said, she thought it went well. "I think it went very, very well," she said. She said the students seemed to have enjoyed the program. "The kids loved it. I have heard nothing but good from the parents and kids," she said, noting that she's even received positive feedback from grandparents whose grandchildren participated in the program. "It's just unreal," McDonald said. "They loved it, and I loved it. I had a ball." Jerrell, like McDonald, thought the program went well. "From talking to the students, from talking to the staff and faculty at the school and the parents, I have not heard anything negative from the program," Jerrell said. With the program comes the possibility that students lives were positively impacted. "I'm just glad to be a part of that," Jerrell said. While the students enjoyed themselves, McDonald said, it wasn't all about fun. While the main theme of DARE is "don't do drugs," there were several other lessons taught, including: Ways to fight drug abuse, peer pressure, different drugs and the way they affect the body, alternatives to drugs to escape feeling of anger and depression, and cause and effect. A few weeks ago, McDonald said it was decided that the program will continue for at least two more years. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek