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- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- From: dgross@polyslo.csc.calpoly.edu (Dave Gross)
- Subject: D.A.R.E. doesn't work -- USA Today cover story
- Message-ID: <1993Oct11.211853.17431@rat.csc.calpoly.edu>
- Date: Mon, 11 Oct 93 21:18:53 GMT
-
- STUDIES FIND DRUG PROGRAM NOT EFFECTIVE
- Yet high-level supporters argue "it's better to have it than not have it"
-
- by Dennis Cauchon
- USA TODAY, 11 October 1993
-
- In just 10 years, D.A.R.E. has grown into the USA's No. 1 drug education
- program, reaching 5 million fifth-graders in 60% of school districts.
- The Drug Abuse Resistance Education logo -- "D.A.R.E. To Keep Kids
- Off Drugs" -- is on bumper stickers, T-shirts, even Kentucky Fried Chicken
- boxes. Police, taxpayers and business give $700 million a year. It's
- also a favorite of dozens of members of Congress.
- But a raft of scientific studies says D.A.R.E., the 17-week course
- taught by uniformed police, doesn't achieve its main long-term goal: stopping
- kids from smoking pot, drinking booze or using other drugs.
- "I've got nothing against D.A.R.E., but we need to get some white
- light on this issue so we can wisely decide how to spend our money and on
- what programs," says Tom Colthurst, who recently organized a national
- conference on drug education at the University of California-San Diego.
- But D.A.R.E. executive director Glenn Levant calls the studies
- flawed and not comprehensive: "Scientists, will tell you bumble bees
- can't fly, but we know they can."
- Levant says a proper national study would cost $3 million-$5 million
- and take seven years to finish.
- Studies have focused mostly on specific cities, and cost several
- hundred thousand dollars each.
- Experts agree recent research on D.A.R.E. is not perfect: It is
- difficult and expensive to measure the behavior of large numbers of
- children over several years.
- But they say the research is better than studies on other drug
- programs.
- "Almost every researcher would agree there's enough information to
- judge D.A.R.E.," says Rand Corp. researcher Phyllis Ellickson.
- "It's well-established that D.A.R.E. doesn't work," says Gilbert
- Botvin of the Institute for Prevention at Cornell University Medical Center.
- Created in 1983 under the direction of former Los Angeles Police chief
- Daryl Gates, D.A.R.E. exploded after the Bush administration gave it heavy
- federal subsidies.
- The program uses lectures, role playing and other techniques to teach
- children to avoid drugs.
- And by all accounts, the kids who take the course and the police who
- teach it think it's terrific.
- D.A.R.E. "does no harm and by far, nothing but good," says Scott
- Mandel, a Los Angeles-area teacher.
- "D.A.R.E. really works," says Mike Miller, Round Rock, Texas, police
- officer and D.A.R.E. teacher. "Surveys from across the nation show kids who
- take the D.A.R.E. course are much less likely to use drugs later in life."
- That's not what most studies show.
- To investigate D.A.R.E.'s effectiveness, researchers looked at two
- similar groups of children: One group takes D.A.R.E.; the other does not.
- Then, researchers followed the children's behavior for several years.
- Since 1987, studies -- most funded by law enforcement agencies involved
- in the program -- have been conducted at 20 North Carolina schools; 31
- Kentucky schools; 11 South Carolina schools; 36 Illinois schools; and 11
- Canadian schools.
- The results were similar.
- The 1991 Kentucky study, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reported,
- found "no statistically significant differences between experimental groups and
- control groups in the percentage of new users of ... cigarettes, smokeless
- tobacco, alcohol, marijuana."
- A 1990 study funded by the Canadian government found "D.A.R.E. had no
- significant effect on the students' use of any of the substances measured....
- They included: tobacco, beer, pop, marijuana, acid, Valium, wine, aspirin,
- uppers, downers, heroin, crack (cocaine), liquor, candy, glue and PCP."
- To make sense of the various studies, the Justice Department hired
- the Research Triangle Institute of Durham, N.C., to conduct a statistical
- analysis of all D.A.R.E. research.
- A preliminary report from the RTI -- analyzing eight studies involving
- 9,500 children -- says D.A.R.E. has "a limited to essentially non-existent
- effect" on drug use.
- D.A.R.E. did have a positive effect on children's knowledge and
- attitudes about drugs, the report says. It also added the social skills needed
- to say no to drugs.
- But even on these measures, D.A.R.E. didn't do as well as other
- drug programs, including local classes taught by teachers and students.
- D.A.R.E. America has launched a behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign
- against the final RTI report, due in November.
- "We're working with D.A.R.E. to ... voice their concerns," says
- Winnie Reed, the National Institute of Justice official overseeing the
- study.
- The pressure has angered some academic researchers.
- "It's repugnant, out of line and very unusual," says Dennis Rosenbaum,
- director of the Center for Research in Law and Justice at the University of
- Illinois-Chicago.
- Rosenbaum -- a D.A.R.E. supporter -- says the group is its own worst
- enemy because it has spent so much effort attacking the evaluations, rather
- than learning from research.
- Even some state and local D.A.R.E. programs are backing away from
- D.A.R.E. America's fight.
- "If we aren't getting the job done, we ought to be man enough to try
- something else," says Tim DeRosa of the Illinois state police and long-time
- D.A.R.E. activist.
- Some government officials are aware of D.A.R.E.'s shortcomings.
- "Research shows that, no, D.A.R.E. hasn't been effective in reducing
- drug use," says William Modzeleski, the top drug official at the Department
- of Education.
- The department has considered asking Congress to repeal a law
- requiring states to give D.A.R.E. a total of $10 million or more a year
- from federal Drug Free Schools money.
- But D.A.R.E. continues to have high-level government support.
- On Sept. 9 -- National D.A.R.E. Day by congressional decree -- D.A.R.E.
- officials and students lunched with dozens of Congress members and met
- Attorney General Janet Reno. Later, they visited first lady Hillary Rodham
- Clinton.
- Drug czar Lee Brown, who started the program in Houston when he was
- police chief, remains a booster.
- "My experience has been positive," Brown says. "The research has
- pointed in many different directions, but my conclusion is it's better to have
- it than not have it. I know first-hand that young people are impressed by
- it and look up to the D.A.R.E. officer as a role model."
- Yet many drug education experts fear that D.A.R.E.'s political clout is
- siphoning drug education money from better programs.
- "D.A.R.E. has a following and sales force that is extremely powerful
- in fighting for scarce resources," says University of Michigan researcher
- Lloyd Johnston, who conducts the government's survey of teen drug use. "But
- its growth is totally out of scale to its effectiveness."
- Johnston and others aren't sure why D.A.R.E. isn't working better.
- Some think it targets children too young; some think teachers and
- older students get better results than uniformed police; others say the
- program relies on psychological theories that don't work.
- Levant thinks critics are just jealous of D.A.R.E.'s success.
- "We're like apple pie," he says. "But I guess you can always find
- someone who doesn't like apple pie."
- --
- ***** INTERNET: dgross@polyslo.CalPoly.EDU **** finger for PGP public key *****
- An applicant for federal employment read the question on an employment form:
- "Do you favour the overthrow of the government by force, subversion or
- violence?" He thought it was a multiple choice question and answered "violence"
-
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