Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: DARE Program Returns To Dublin School System After A
Title:US GA: DARE Program Returns To Dublin School System After A
Published On:2004-09-02
Source:Courier Herald, The (GA)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 01:11:38
D.A.R.E. PROGRAM RETURNS TO DUBLIN SCHOOL SYSTEM AFTER A ONE-YEAR
HIATUS

Fifth-grader Corshay Battle received a valuable life lesson Wednesday --
one the Moore Street Elementary student was none too hesitant about sharing.

"We learned that we should not take drugs and to just say no," said the
11-year-old.

Battle was among the first Dublin students to take part in the local
D.A.R.E. program this year following its one-year hiatus from the school
system.

Now, local law enforcement officials are hoping Battle's newfound
perspective is one she and her classmates don't mind sharing for a long time.

Dublin Police Chief Wayne Cain said last year the program was not up and
running in the school system because there was no trained officer on staff
to teach it since the former D.A.R.E. officer left the police force.
However, prior to that the program had been successfully running in Dublin
since 1990.

Cain was one of the local officers trained in Georgia's first D.A.R.E.
class, and worked as a D.A.R.E. officers for six years.

"Dublin was one of the first cities in Georgia to have a D.A.R.E. program,"
he said.

In fact, local law enforcement officers from both Dublin Police and the
Laurens County Sheriff's Department were among the first in the state to
complete the mandated D.A.R.E. training 14 years ago.

Dublin Police Officer Walter Johnson is the new D.A.R.E officer for Dublin
City Schools. He was on hand at Moore Street Wednesday, where he gave a
program introduction to system fifth-graders. The program is usually
introduced to students in fifth or sixth grade according to the official
national D.A.R.E. Web site. However, Cain said there is a shorter version
of the curriculum that can be used for elementary-aged students as well as
versions for both middle and high schools.

He said he hopes to have another officer trained soon as well.

"We do oftentimes do visits to the lower grades," he said.

Four Moore Street classes will take part in the program this semester, and
four others will participate in the spring.

Developed by a team of educators and trained officers, Drug Abuse
Resistance Education or D.A.R.E. focuses on teaching children about
personal responsibility and peer pressure in hopes of curbing drug abuse
among the nation's youth. Nationwide, over 26 million school-aged children
will take part in the program this year alone, according to the Web site.

The 10-week national D.A.R.E. curriculum is taught by a local trained
officer and covers topics such as smoking and tobacco use, peer pressure
and alcohol abuse.

Johnson completed a two-week training course at Fort Stewart to become a
D.A.R.E. officer, along with other officers from across the state and even
some from other states. There, he learned classroom management skills and
the proper methods for relaying the D.A.R.E. message to students. In order
to retain his certification, he must attend the national D.A.R.E.
conference each year. According to the D.A.R.E. Web site, there are over
50,000 trained program officers across the country.

Each week for the course of the program, Johnson will meet with the
students to go over a particular area designated by the curriculum. At the
start of each week's discussion, he will also pull questions from the
D.A.R.E. box set up in each of the classrooms. The boxes are provided to
give students a chance to write down any questions they may have or issues
they would like to discuss.

Johnson said while it may take the students a while to warm up to the
program, he hopes they become comfortable enough to talk to him or another
adult if they have issues they need to discuss.

"I'm working on getting to know them," he said following Wednesday's
introduction.

Throughout the course of the program, the students also learn how to deal
with personal pressures at home and how to talk to their parents or another
adult if they have a problem. Johnson said while the old curriculum was
more lecture-based, the new curriculum focuses on discussion and how kids
can deal with drug-related issues. The new curriculum also addresses
advertising and how young adults may become a target for television and
radio. Johnson said it also addresses misconceptions advertising presents
about youth and drug use and how to work through those types of images.

"Kids are not using as many drugs and alcohol as people think they are," he
said, which goes against some of the images young adults may see presented
on television. "It teaches them to make the right decisions."

The program aims to teach youth how to recognize and resist influences that
may steer them toward drug abuse. In 2001, there were 468 reported
drug-related juvenile arrests in Georgia, ages 10 to 17, according to
statistics from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
However, the agency's Web site also indicates those figures have declined
in recent years.

Cain said although some of the lessons learned through the program may fade
as the students get older, much of the impact remains if the message is
reinforced. He said he often has former students he taught in the program
who still come up to him today to relay what type of impact it has had on
their lives. While an officer, he said he taught every student in the
Dublin system from fifth-grade to high school.

"I knew every student in the school system," he said.

More than anything, Cain said the program works to build a relationship
between students and officers as well as other adults, which is most
important of all.

"It builds a bond and trust with the police," he said."As with any program,
if you don't reinforce it, the lessons fade over time. Anytime you can
communicate with our youth and make a the class interesting, they learn."
Member Comments
No member comments available...