Pubdate: Tue, 27 Oct 2009 Source: Barrhead Leader, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Barrhead Leader Contact: http://www.barrheadleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4737 Author: Ian Kucerak, Staff Writer DRUG CLASS AN EYE OPENER FOR LOCAL TEACHERS Part of Friday's professional development day held at Barrhead Composite High School, focused on the impact that drugs have on their users and what teachers should look for when they're in their classrooms. Taught by RCMP Cst. Morroco Johnson, the school liaison officer, the hour-and-a-half session saw a full house of over 26 educators sit down in a classroom to hear the presentation which covered a plethora of drugs and their effects. Johnson began the session by defining a drug as anything that changes the way a person's body or mind works. She spent the majority of the next hour speaking about specific drugs, giving examples of how they smell, or what they look like. For drugs like crack cocaine or methamphetamine, which are increasingly common in the Barr-head area according to the police, she gave graphic details coming from her experiences working the beat. Johnson spoke about the threat to students' health and well-being from popular drugs like marijuana, ecstasy and cocaine, while warning those present about the rising popularity of drugs such as methamphetamine, colloquially called meth, which has become an epidemic in many parts of the country. She said that while working in more affluent areas in southern Alberta, she saw many cases of cocaine and ecstasy abuse, while in the region around Barrhead, cheaper drugs like crack cocaine and meth are more common. If a parent or teacher suspects that someone is abusing meth, they need professional help to stop using the drug. "Most of the people on crack, meth or heroin have to go to a centre," Johnson said, while clicking through slides showing the rotten teeth and deep, festering sores common among meth addicts. While meth, marijuana and cocaine have had an effect in the community for years, Johnson suspects that date-rape drugs such as gamma-hydroxybutyric acid, or GHB, may be trickling into Barrhead's high school. "There's been a few incidents at the school where I suspect GHB might be involved," said the officer, who patrols the halls of local schools as part of her job as a school liaison. Even the family medicine cabinet can be a source of drug abuse, if teens take their parents' prescription medication or become involved in illegal methods of obtaining drugs like oxycontin or ketamine - a powerful horse tranquilizer - Johnson said. "I think it's around Barrhead," she said, referencing the number of veterinary offices that may see ketamine go missing. "Keep your eyes open for this one," Johnson told the crowd. "We have quite a few drugstore thefts." The main message of the afternoon session, for Johnson, was that whether they were in the classroom teaching, behind a desk in the school's office or at home with their own children, everyone plays a role in how kids turn out. "Be a good role model because they're going to follow what you do," she said. If parents need help reaching their children, the government of Alberta has created, along with law enforcement, a program called Kids & Drugs. Johnson said the program is a way for parents to educate themselves on how to approach drug abuse with the attitude that they should help their children, rather than yell at them. For educators sitting in the audience, Johnson's presentation was a useful tool to add to their toolbox when they head back into class, said Allan Menduk, the principal of Fort Assiniboine School. He said the presentation reinforces a reality in rural Alberta and small schools. Drugs can be a problem and educators need to know what to look for. Menduk felt that seeing examples and hearing about both the physical and behavioral signs that a student may be using drugs was useful. This year has been a quiet one at Fort Assiniboine though, as the staff hasn't seen evidence of drug use at the small composite school. "We haven't had any signs of it coming into the building," Menduk related. Michelle Kennett is a program assistant at Dunstable School in the Pembina Hills School Division. She felt the presentation was "eye opening." "There was one of the movies that we were shown about kids doing as their parents do and that really should be on TV," she said. "What they showed was a parent going to beat up a wife and a child right beside, doing the same thing, a mother throwing up on the side of the road and the child doing the same thing," she explained, about the public awareness video Johnson played. "We really have to think what we're showing our children and the next generation to come." While drugs are much less of a concern at elementary schools like Dunstable, the program assistant echoed the sentiment of many in the room, confirming that the presentation was welcomed by many educators in the room. "This is information for anybody, it's out there in our world," Kennett said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr