Pubdate: Thu, 17 May 2007 Source: Orange County News (US TX) Copyright: 2007 Hearst Communications, Inc. Contact: http://www.theorangecountynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4253 Author: Greg Hayes, The Orange County News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) D.A.R.E. TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE First Year Back Successful For Drug Resistance And Education Program In Vidor School District The questions that Jerry Parker fields sometimes may seem tough for someone to want to answer. "Have you ever done drugs?" "Did you ever drink? Why?" But he answers every question he is asked truthfully, because the ones asking him are the same ones he feels are the most important for our future - children. Fifth graders to be exact. And Parker, D.A.R.E. instructor for the Vidor Independent School District knows that they are looking to him for an example. "If we can affect one child to make the right decision, it is all worth it," Parker said. "Whatever it takes." The Vidor school district reinstated the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program's fifth grade curriculum before the start of the current school year. "It is a scientifically based curriculum that covers the required categories for student education," Parker said. "It is still the same process that was used by the Orange County Sheriff's Department, before they dropped the program [on Sept. 13, 2004]. We just reinforce it differently." One way that Parker uses different reinforcement is that he is a member of the school district's own police force, so he is able to spend two days a week working with fifth graders for three class periods. Sheriff's department D.A.R.E. officers had to cover all school districts in the Orange County area and never had the chance to work with students one-onone. "The program works much better this way," Tammy Cox, teen leadership instructor and art teacher at Vidor Middle School, said. "Jerry actually gets to know the kids, something that the county officers were never really able to do. They just didn't have the luxury of getting to be around one group of kids." Cox said that she has worked with the D.A.R.E. program over her tenure at the middle school, and said that sometimes Vidor ended up getting the short end of the stick when it came to the program. "Some of the county officers were not able to get across to the kids and get down on their level," she said. "That is really needed to make this program work. Jerry is able to do that." Parker said that in his eyes and from what he is seeing the kids do, he personally views the first year of the reinstated D.A.R.E. program as a success. "These kids are sharp," he said. "They ask a lot of questions and they want more information. I read the essays that they write and they put a lot of the information that they have learned into what they write." The D.A.R.E. program not only focuses on drugs, tobacco and alcohol but also on bullying and violence, which Parker also teaches classes on at the elementary school level across the district. "Right now we are reaching the 10-12 year-old age range," Parker said. "But the most vulnerable years in a child's life come in the 13- to 14-year-old range. I'd really like to explore the opportunities of getting a class at the seventh grade junior high level to reinforce what we are teaching here and to reach those in the most vulnerable group." Parker said that the workbooks and paperwork are available for the seventh grade curriculum. "It can't hurt to try," he said. "If we swing the bat, we might hit the ball. But if we never pick up the bat, we'll never hit anything." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman