News (Media Awareness Project) - US: OPED: Futile Resistance |
Title: | US: OPED: Futile Resistance |
Published On: | 2008-10-07 |
Source: | Reason Magazine (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 13:49:07 |
FUTILE RESISTANCE
Contrary to the impression created by DARE T-shirts and bumper stickers,
most kids do in fact "resist drugs," so there's nothing especially daring
about it. But it does take a certain amount of chutzpah to push a "drug
education" curriculum that has never been validated by independent
research. That's what DARE - a.k.a. Drug Abuse Resistance Education, a
program used in nearly three-quarters of U.S. school districts - has been
doing for 16 years.
In the most recent confirmation of the program's ineffectiveness,
researchers at the University of Kentucky followed up on a study in which
students at elementary schools randomly assigned to DARE were compared to
students who received drug information as part of health class. The initial
study, which evaluated the students from sixth grade through 10th grade,
found that DARE had a temporary effect on the attitudes they expressed
toward drug use but no effect on drug use itself.
The follow-up study, which surveyed about 1,000 of the original subjects at
age 20, was intended to test for "sleeper effects" that might show up after
adolescence. "Few differences were found between the 2 groups in terms of
actual drug use, drug attitudes, or self-esteem," Donald R. Lynam and his
colleagues wrote in the August 1999 Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, "and in no case did the DARE group have a more successful
outcome than the comparison group." (The report is available at
http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp/ccp674590.html .)
Lynam et al. offered two possible reasons why DARE continues to be the
nation's most popular "drug education" program despite the lack of evidence
that it works. First, since stopping kids from using drugs is an
unquestioned goal, DARE is "a 'feel-good' program...that everyone can
support." Second, parents see that most kids who go through DARE do not get
into trouble with drugs. They may not realize this is also true of
teenagers in general, because "adults may believe that drug use among
adolescents is much more frequent than it actually is."
Hmm. Where could they have gotten that impression?
Contrary to the impression created by DARE T-shirts and bumper stickers,
most kids do in fact "resist drugs," so there's nothing especially daring
about it. But it does take a certain amount of chutzpah to push a "drug
education" curriculum that has never been validated by independent
research. That's what DARE - a.k.a. Drug Abuse Resistance Education, a
program used in nearly three-quarters of U.S. school districts - has been
doing for 16 years.
In the most recent confirmation of the program's ineffectiveness,
researchers at the University of Kentucky followed up on a study in which
students at elementary schools randomly assigned to DARE were compared to
students who received drug information as part of health class. The initial
study, which evaluated the students from sixth grade through 10th grade,
found that DARE had a temporary effect on the attitudes they expressed
toward drug use but no effect on drug use itself.
The follow-up study, which surveyed about 1,000 of the original subjects at
age 20, was intended to test for "sleeper effects" that might show up after
adolescence. "Few differences were found between the 2 groups in terms of
actual drug use, drug attitudes, or self-esteem," Donald R. Lynam and his
colleagues wrote in the August 1999 Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, "and in no case did the DARE group have a more successful
outcome than the comparison group." (The report is available at
http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp/ccp674590.html .)
Lynam et al. offered two possible reasons why DARE continues to be the
nation's most popular "drug education" program despite the lack of evidence
that it works. First, since stopping kids from using drugs is an
unquestioned goal, DARE is "a 'feel-good' program...that everyone can
support." Second, parents see that most kids who go through DARE do not get
into trouble with drugs. They may not realize this is also true of
teenagers in general, because "adults may believe that drug use among
adolescents is much more frequent than it actually is."
Hmm. Where could they have gotten that impression?
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