DARE Could Lose Federal
Funding Under New Policies,
Says The Prohibitionist Dallas Morning News
(Ed. note: The problem with true-believer
prohibitionists like the Dallas News is that they sincerely expect the unworkable to work
and the unjust to bring justice. When it this does not happen, they begin to offer
constructive criticisms that threaten vested interests and challenge defensive ideologies.
For a long time any criticism of any prohibitionist fantasy that did not end with
"spend more money" or "make tougher laws" was immediately branded as
"pro-drug." There are direct parallels with the decline of the Soviet system.
Prohibitionism is in its late Soviet phase and the disillusionment of the true-believers
has begun.)
See
Houston Police Defend
DARE, Libel NORML, Saying "They want kids to use drugs recreationally."
and
A Graduate Of
Houston DARE Sends In His "Testimonial" "Who wouldnt want to
know what all the fuss is about?"
and
NORML Responds to
Libels by Houston DARE
and
"I like DARE. DARE gives kids the
curiosity factor which leads them into finding one of the best plants on earth!"
Some anti-drug efforts called ineffective
From the The Dallas Morning News
July 22, 1998
By Gayle Reaves
D.A.R.E. program could lose federal funding under new policies
Many school districts in Texas and around the country may have to replace or rethink
their drug education programs over the next two years because of recent action by the U.S.
Department of Education.
The federal agency has just said no to spending hundreds of millions of tax dollars on
programs deemed ineffective in keeping kids off drugs. This year, the government will
spend $556 million on anti-drug programs, including $40 million in Texas, through its Safe
and Drug-Free Schools initiative.
The most widely used program in Texas schools could be affected by the new policies.
The controversial D.A.R.E. program - Drug Abuse Resistance Education - is used in more
than half of Texas school districts but did not make a list of programs researchers have
labeled effective in reducing or preventing drug use among young people.
D.A.R.E., used in Plano and several other North Texas districts, has been criticized as
ineffective and too restrictive. It is funded by a variety of sources, but the $345,000
spent annually by its statewide group to train police officers to teach its program comes
from federal funds.
The main program used in Dallas schools isnt on the list, either, but officials
said it shouldnt be affected because it does not use federal money.
Law Enforcement Teaching Students - or LETS - was developed by the Dallas Police
Department and Dallas school officials. Several other area school districts also use it.
"This is going to impact most of what everyone does," in terms of school
anti-drug programs, said Kay Beth Stavley of the Texas Education Agency.
Under rules that went into effect this month, the Department of Education will require
school districts and other agencies that receive federal money to prove within two years
that their programs reduce drug use among students.
School districts will have to tackle the tough job of scientifically justifying their
current programs; choose programs that have already been accepted as effective; or find a
new source of funding.
Schools that dont use federal money or those that already use proven, effective
programs wont have to change, said Ms. Stavley, Texas coordinator for the Safe and
Drug-Free Schools program.
For others, "the reality is that schools need to seriously rethink what
theyre doing, really look at where their dollars are going, whats the best use
of their funds," she said.
The education agency has given school and state officials a list of programs that
experts say have been proven effective by testing and research. Education officials stress
their list is partial and preliminary, intended only as a guide to school officials.
D.A.R.E. leaders say they have been consulting with federal
education and Justice Department officials about what it would take to get their program
on the recommended list.
"We are putting in place research to prove our effectiveness," said Dave
Williams, statewide coordinator of the Texas D.A.R.E. Institute.
Officials with Fort Worth and Arlington, which use D.A.R.E., say they are reviewing
their participation in that and other drug programs.
"All our drug programs will be reviewed except those found to be
research-based," said Roy Griffin, coordinator of drug prevention programs for Fort
Worth schools. His district uses a variety of anti-drug programs in various grades,
including D.A.R.E., which is paid for by the Fort Worth Police Department.
When proven programs are available, he said, he questions continued use of curricula
that may not work.
"If you know theres something that works and youre not using it, whose
fault is that?" he said. "Its like saying were going to try a new
reading program for two years. If it doesnt work, weve lost two years of
teaching children to read."
William Modzeleski, director of Safe and Drug-Free Schools, said the U.S. education
agency became concerned "as we began to see drug use [among young people] go up again
after decreasing for a decade, going up for four or five years in a row. We wanted to take
a careful look at how our dollars are being spent."
The effort to make drug programs accountable comes at the same time as a new $195
million government anti-drug advertising campaign that is delivering stark messages about
the dangers of drug abuse through newspapers, the Internet and broadcast media. Experts
said it may take as long as three years to determine this efforts effectiveness.
For federally funded programs in U.S. schools, Mr. Modzeleski said, grant recipients
must move beyond rating programs by popularity to judging them by results.
In North Texas, school officials, police officers and parents whose children have been
through various anti-drug programs talked about how well-received the programs are and how beneficial they thought it was for police officers and students to
interact in school. But they had little grounds for comparing programs and little
hard data about how the programs affected drug use.
"I really feel the kids need all the kinds of information they can get, wherever
they can get it," said Brenda Barnes, whose daughter, Lindsey, participated in
D.A.R.E. at Short Elementary in Arlington.
"I know Lindsey talked real often about the police officers who taught the
program. I would rather my kids find out these kinds of things through a great source than
on the streets."
D.A.R.E. is only one of many programs that could be affected by the new federal policy.
But long-standing criticisms of D.A.R.E. are in part responsible for the new policy.
Launched in 1983 in Los Angeles, D.A.R.E. is the largest and
oldest and one of the best-known drug education programs operating in American schools.
D.A.R.E. says its program is taught to 26 million U.S. schoolchildren and 9 million in
other countries. The set curriculum is taught, usually in fifth grade, for an hour a week
for 17 weeks by uniformed police officers.
Plano Officer Jody Privett, a D.A.R.E. instructor, said the presence of uniformed
officers is one of the programs strengths.
"The way most people I know in D.A.R.E. look at it is, any prevention [effort],
whether D.A.R.E. or some other class, is great," he said.
But numerous studies over the last several years have found
D.A.R.E. and many other programs have done little or nothing to reduce or prevent drug
abuse by children and teens.
D.A.R.E. officials take exception to those studies. At the same time, they say they are
commissioning their own studies to show it does get results.
In Texas, "were doing a sampling evaluation," said Mr. Williams of the
state D.A.R.E. Institute. The study, by an outside firm, will look at drug use by children
who have taken D.A.R.E. classes compared with those who havent.
Other critics object to D.A.R.E.s use of student pledges to
abstain from all drugs and alcohol and the programs teaching that drug use of any
kind is bad.
Larry Nickerson of Fort Worth said his daughter, in a discussion of other school
matters, volunteered that she didnt like D.A.R.E. because of
the required pledge and because "the D.A.R.E. people continually harp on not using
drugs and she already knows that, so why do they keep saying this over and over?"
Mr. Nickerson said he dislikes D.A.R.E. and would like to see the nation rethink all of
its drug policies. He said he had not discussed his feelings with his daughter.
College student Lee Johnson, 21, took D.A.R.E. classes in sixth grade in a small town
in Illinois. During the course, she said, rumors circulated that the
instructing officer was himself a drug user. According to local newspaper articles, the
officer resigned after being suspended and investigated for "improprieties" amid
allegations of marijuana use.
When she has kids, Ms. Johnson said, she will not let them participate in D.A.R.E.
Of more than 40 kids in her sixth-grade class, she said, "I
dont know of any kid . . . that didnt try drugs at least once. And some, maybe
half, sell and/or use today. And I dont live in L.A. or anything. I live in your
typical small-town U.S.A."
She said she believes her classmates decisions about drugs were influenced by
what happened to their D.A.R.E. instructor.
"A lot of what I heard was, How can you believe in something when the person
teaching you is doing the opposite? " she said.
A number of cities, school districts and police departments around the country have
dropped D.A.R.E. because of concerns over its lack of proven results and other issues.
"D.A.R.E. is an excellent program," said Sgt. Brent Caughron of the Cedar
Hill Police Department. But the city now uses other programs instead.
Dallas police Sgt. Mike Marshall credits D.A.R.E. with being a groundbreaker, "the
program everybody learned from."
But after a few years of the early anti-drug programs, he
said, police and school officials "found we were educating some very smart drug
users. We were teaching kids how to recognize drugs, how to use them. Over a period of
years, we decided that wasnt the best thing to do."
LETS, used most in Dallas schools, was developed about 12 years ago to incorporate more
"life skills," which D.A.R.E. also now includes.
He said he has been told LETS "is one of the few programs taught in schools that
consistently gets outstanding reviews for quality and content. But as to whether they
[those schools] have an increase or decrease in drug use, I dont know."
A quote from one of the scores of Web sites concerning D.A.R.E. sums up the problem in
measuring drug abuse prevention and the attitude toward such measurement that the
Department of Education rules seek to address.
"How do you prove a crime was prevented? How do you prove D.A.R.E. classes kept
youth from using drugs?" the D.A.R.E. supporter wrote. "How do you catch a
moonbeam?"
Not everyone is convinced that the new federal guidelines will bring about substantial
changes.
Glenn Brooks is director of justice programs for the criminal justice division of the
Texas governors office, which distributes about $8 million of the federal drug
education money.
"Ive been around state and federal stuff a long
time," he said. "This may turn out to be wonderful or it may turn out to be
nothing."
|