Pubdate: Thu, 21 Aug 2008 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2008 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/letters_policy/ Website: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: Steve Jones Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) BRUNSWICK EXPANDS CRITICIZED DRUG CLASS Determent Program Offered To Seventh- And Fifth-Graders SHALLOTTE, N.C. -- Brunswick County school board members plan to spend $50,000 this year to expand an anti-drug education program that some studies say does not work. In addition, school board members voted to begin a Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program for Brunswick County seventh-graders without having qualified educators review the curriculum. "It is supposed to be better," said Reeda Hargrove, Brunswick County Schools' director of student support services. Hargrove said she was told the seventh-grade program had a new curriculum, but that no school administrators had reviewed it before school board members voted to spend the money for it. DARE classes are offered to the county's fifth-grade students, Hargrove said, and students who take it choose it as an elective at the same level as physical education, music and art. She said parental permission is not required for students to enroll in the DARE courses, which critics have said may actually push students to hard drug use by making no distinction between "soft" drugs such as marijuana and more addictive substances such as heroin. A 1994 study by the Research Triangle Institute in Raleigh looked at eight, unconnected DARE effectiveness studies to see if any conclusions could be drawn from a broad-based examination of the program. "DARE's short-term effectiveness for reducing or preventing drug use behavior is small and less than for interactive programs," Research Triangle Institute researchers concluded, according to the Raleigh-based agency's Web site. A 1999 study by the University of Kentucky determined that the long-term effect of the DARE program is negligible. Researchers looked at students who had DARE classes 10 years earlier versus students who had not had DARE education. "Few differences were found between the two groups in terms of actual drug use, drug attitudes or self-esteem, and in no case did the DARE groups have a more successful outcome than the comparison group," the study found. The DARE program debuted in Los Angeles schools in 1983 and proliferated through public school systems with little scrutiny because, critics contend, elected officials felt good about doing something aimed at curbing drug use among young people. Now, however, some school systems, including one in Oakland, Calif., have voted the classes out of public schools. Charlie Miller, Brunswick County school board vice chairman and chief deputy of the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department, said he reviewed the curriculum with DARE officers. Miller is not a trained educator. He said the seventh-grade program is more in depth than that given to fifth-graders. "It goes into a little more of what happens" when users take illegal drugs, he said. The seventh-grade program will include information on character education and gangs that isn't a part of the fifth-grade classes, he said. Miller said he is aware of the criticism of the program and has told Brunswick County's new DARE officers to track for two years the fifth-graders who've taken the classes "to see if it's working." Miller said his support of the program is based on the recommendations of DARE officers. Miller did not know if drug-related incidents at Brunswick County schools have lessened since the DARE classes were first taught. Robert Turner, spokesman for the school system, said the program was first offered in Brunswick County schools about 20 years ago. He said Hargrove is now researching the numbers of drug incidents in schools through the years and did not have them Wednesday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom