News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: PUB LTE: DARE Is A 'Failure,' Says Reader |
Title: | US CA: PUB LTE: DARE Is A 'Failure,' Says Reader |
Published On: | 2000-05-11 |
Source: | Tahoe World (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-04 19:01:11 |
I was shocked and disappointed to read that anyone is celebrating DARE
after all the damage it has done to young people ("DARE celebrates 10
years at KB" in the May 4 Tahoe World).
Studies on DARE consistently show it is a failure. So dismal is the
DARE record, the U.S. Department of Education refuses to include DARE
on its list of programs whose effectiveness is proven.
Not only is DARE a failure, it is an expensive failure. The real cost
of DARE is hidden from the public. DARE costs about $5 a student,
which covers each 5th grader's DARE workbook, T-shirt and ruler. But
police time adds another $20-$50 per student, depending on the
department and the number of classes. Nationally, DARE officers are
paid twice as much as teachers, for a job that requires far less
education - or risk.
DARE also takes up valuable students' time, which may even be an even
bigger reason to junk DARE. Fifth- and sixth-graders need math,
science and reading. While they might need the skills to resist drugs,
they don't need a program shown to have no lasting effect on drug use.
As precious as class time is in a 180-day school year, pulling
students out of math to listen to DARE officers hardly makes sense.
Steve Kubby,
Olympic Valley, Ca.
after all the damage it has done to young people ("DARE celebrates 10
years at KB" in the May 4 Tahoe World).
Studies on DARE consistently show it is a failure. So dismal is the
DARE record, the U.S. Department of Education refuses to include DARE
on its list of programs whose effectiveness is proven.
Not only is DARE a failure, it is an expensive failure. The real cost
of DARE is hidden from the public. DARE costs about $5 a student,
which covers each 5th grader's DARE workbook, T-shirt and ruler. But
police time adds another $20-$50 per student, depending on the
department and the number of classes. Nationally, DARE officers are
paid twice as much as teachers, for a job that requires far less
education - or risk.
DARE also takes up valuable students' time, which may even be an even
bigger reason to junk DARE. Fifth- and sixth-graders need math,
science and reading. While they might need the skills to resist drugs,
they don't need a program shown to have no lasting effect on drug use.
As precious as class time is in a 180-day school year, pulling
students out of math to listen to DARE officers hardly makes sense.
Steve Kubby,
Olympic Valley, Ca.
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