Pubdate: Wed, 11 Aug 1999 Source: Canadian Press (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Canadian Press (CP). Author: Gen. Barry R. Mccaffrey ABCs OF DRUGS SHOULD BE A PART OF SCHOOL CURRICULUM The time to hear about the hazards of drug abuse is in the early years. The place to do so is where other learning happens: first in the home and then at school. Drug abuse among preteens and adolescents is particularly dangerous because it tends to accompany a constellation of destructive behavior. Youngsters who abuse drugs are more likely than drug-free peers to exhibit poor academic performance, truancy, violence and theft; premature sexual activity, pregnancy out of wedlock and sexually transmitted diseases; auto accidents and other forms of recklessness; risk taking and thrill-seeking; suicide or homicide; and a wide range of health problems. We aren't sure which came first, the chicken or the egg: whether depression over bad grades leads to substance abuse or drugs lower achievement because drugged students can't pay attention. Undoubtedly, the progression moves in both directions. Substance abuse is both a sign that something is wrong and a cause of other problems. The fact that drug use now starts among younger kids than in the past is bad for a number of reasons. The most important learning invariably happens earliest. Fundamentals of reading, grammar, mathematics, language and memory, scientific observation, inductive and deductive reasoning, creativity and organization may well be lost for good if missed in primary and secondary grades. Furthermore, adolescence is a time when identity formation combines with competence -- laying the foundation for later achievement. Psychoactive drugs allow youngsters to take a leave of absence from the psychological agenda of maturation. Diminished social and intellectual capacity, lost opportunity, medical problems and isolation are just a few side-effects of drug abuse for youth. Ideally, drug education can be integrated into the rest of the curriculum. What drugs do to the body falls under biology; how different drugs interact with one another is part of chemistry; the rise of multinational drug syndicates can be studied in world history, economics or criminal justice; and the role of mind-altering substances in various cultures is an aspect of sociology. Whether concentrated in a multidisciplinary course or sprinkled throughout various classes, drug education should be expanded because students are surprisingly ignorant about this subject. Research proves that school-based prevention works when properly designed and administered. A Cornell University study of 6,000 students found that the odds of drinking, smoking and using marijuana were 40 percent lower among seventh-through ninth-graders who participated in substance-abuse programs. Perhaps more surprising was a Department of Education study which revealed that positive school experience and more time spent on academic activities in general "were associated with less drug use, more desirable attitudes toward drugs and higher self-esteem." These findings, in conjunction with research that consistently documents a strong correlation between drug use and all forms of anti-social behavior, including violence, show that substance abuse is not an isolated problem. All this information points toward the fact that drug-abuse prevention goes beyond imparting data about the effects of each drug. Reliable statistics have taught us that minimizing an assortment of risk factors and increasing prevention factors can reduce the rate of substance abuse along with other destructive practices. Risk factors include chaotic home environments plagued by substance abuse and/or mental illness, ineffective parenting, lack of mutual attachments with adults, school failure, poor social skills, affiliation with deviant peers and peer approval of drugs. The most important prevention factors are: strong family bonds supplemented by clear rules of conduct and parental involvement with children; success in school; involvement with positive institutions like school, religious, athletic, and charitable groups; difficulty obtaining drugs (low drug availability); and intolerance of drug abuse among peers and adults. In the past, some school-based prevention programs didn't adequately rely on scientific studies of what works. The Office of National Drug Control Policy has developed measures of effectiveness that schools can apply to their efforts. Money previously spent on T-shirts with anti-drug slogans or one-time speakers might better be spent on mentoring, family involvement or community reinforcement using local media. Some schools received too little money for effective programs. In the future, spending must be tied to achievement. Monies should be tracked and programs monitored. Only effective approaches will be funded. This competitive feature ensures that proven methods will outstrip marginal approaches. A corps of trained professionals is being made available to assist in developing a prevention infrastructure that addresses risk and prevention factors and produces positive change on an on-going basis. Parental and communal involvement is critical. These changes, among others, are featured in the current Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities bill now before Congress. The city of Houston is to be commended for the partnership it has established with ONDCP to accomplish these goals. With federal support, Houston and Harris County will be focusing their resources to rid the community of drugs. Treatment options are being expanded, and education will be coordinated through in-school programs linked to the criminal justice system, the corporate community, policy-makers, mass media and law enforcement. The first federal-city alliance of its kind, this partnership entails a steering committee composed of private drug-control experts and a data committee to handle the targeting and evaluation process. Such oversight can guarantee, for example, that youth programs are properly geared for each age group because research indicates that "one size does not fit all" when it comes to drug education. In 1998, the Society for Prevention Research honored Texas with an award for high standards in drug prevention. Texas can be proud that it is leading the way nationally in implementing a system to reduce drug abuse and violence among young people. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea