Pubdate: 29 June 1999 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: of Telegraph Group Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Sandra Laville and John Clare IS EVERY CHILD NOW AT RISK? (Many children today are as casual in their attitude to drugs as their parents were to alcohol.) FEW parents realise how widespread illegal drug-taking has become among young people. Official figures suggest that about half the pupils doing GCSEs and A-levels this month will have at least experimented with drugs. By the time they finish school, only a small minority will have consistently said no. Few parents realise, either, that many young people are as casual about drugs as their own generation was about alcohol - and treat the laws against it with much the same respect as Americans regarded Prohibition in the 1920s. Much of the confusion behind this generational gulf stems from using one word - and one set of attitudes - to cover a phenomenon that extends from dropping the occasional "E" to full-blown heroin addiction. The confusion makes it hard for parents, children and teachers to find common ground - and yet the need to do so is urgent. Since the demise of the simplistic "Say No" campaign, few schools are clear about what they are trying to achieve - and few parents know what advice to give. In a three-part series starting today, we describe the extent and nature of the problem, and point to a possible way forward. Below, we start with the experiences of young people at a range of institutions - - though there is no suggestion that these have a greater or lesser drug problem than any other educational establishments. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea