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- Date: Mon, 20 Sep 1993 16:42:26 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Thomas Walsh <A200097@UNIVSCVM.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: DARE
- Sender: Drug Abuse Education Information and Research <DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01H369JSSWYA8WWBW4@YMIR.Claremont.Edu>
-
- My colleague and director, Dr. Dennis F. Nalty, has collected a number
- of citations for DARE evaluations and has recently abstracted them for
- the purpose of making a proposal. Since there have been some queries and
- discussion on DARE recently, I am taking the liberty of sending his file
- along as is. I am sorry it's rather long, and you may have to scramble to
- get addresses, butI hope it will be useful to somebody.
-
- Thomas T. Walsh <A200097@univscvm.csd.scarolina.edu>
- Research and Statistics Administrator
- South Carolina Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services
- 3700 Forest Drive
- Columbia, SC 29204
-
-
- REVIEW OF EXISTING DARE EVALUATIONS
-
-
- Introduction
-
- DARE started in Los Angeles in 1983 and has been adopted in school
- districts in all 50 states. The DARE program is a 17 week
- curriculum (45 min to 1 hr, once a week) which sends uniformed
- police officers into 5th and 6th grade classrooms to provide
- information about alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs and to provide
- strategies for students to resist the use of these drugs.
-
- Consensus of studies
-
- The early DARE evaluations (1987-1989) were generally favorable -
- showing decreased alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use, increased
- resistance to drug use, increased self-esteem, and other positive
- results.
-
- The majority of the recent evaluations of DARE (late 1989 to
- present) have shown decidedly mixed results. The majority of these
- recent studies attempt to measure the longer-term effects of DARE
- (one or more years after the completion of the DARE curriculum).
- The current consensus is that DARE does significantly and
- positively affect student attitudes toward alcohol, tobacco, and
- other drugs (ATOD), but the findings generally indicate that
- exposure to DARE does not significantly reduce the actual use of
- these drugs.
-
- In general, the better controlled studies tend to show the least
- effect of DARE. In addition, follow-up studies, which track
- students for several years following DARE exposure, tend to show
- little or no lasting effects of DARE.
- Los Angeles DARE evaluations
-
- A 7 year evaluation of DARE in Los Angeles was begun in 1985. The
- evaluation was conducted by the Evaluation and Training Institute.
-
- Several reports have been released at various stages in this
- process.
-
- 1988 report on DARE in Los Angeles
-
- This was one of the first evaluations on DARE effectiveness.
-
- DARE Population: Surveyed 8th graders (n=498) who had received DARE
- in the 6th grade.
-
- Control Population: Compared these responses to 8th graders (n=163)
- who had not been exposed to DARE.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE students had significantly lower use of alcohol, tobacco,
- inhalants, and heroin 2 years post-DARE.
-
- 2) The reductions in use were especially significant for the boys.
-
- 3) No significant differences were found between DARE and non-DARE
- groups in rates of alcohol, tobacco and other drug (ATOD) use by
- the student's friends, siblings, and other household members.
-
- 1990 report on DARE in Los Angeles
-
- DARE evaluation report for 1985-1989. Conducted by the Evaluation
- and Training Institute in 1990.
-
- DARE population: Started with 6th graders who had received DARE.
- Then measured the same students 2 years later in eight grade.
-
- Control population: matched population of students who had not
- received DARE.
-
- Conducted an annual longitudinal survey of the same DARE and non-
- DARE students over a 4 year period and analyzed school records.
-
- The drug use questions were compared over the two-year period from
- the 1985-1986 school year to the 1987-1988 school year.
-
- School record reviews were conducted over the entire period from
- 1985 to 1989.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE students had significantly lower tobacco use than non-DARE
- students.
-
- 2) DARE students had significantly lower cocaine use than non-DARE
- students.
-
- 3) DARE students had more negative attitudes about drug use than
- non-DARE students.
-
- 4) DARE students had fewer reported discipline and defiance
- problems than non-DARE students, as determined by school record
- abstraction.
-
- 5) However, no significant differences were found in teacher
- ratings of student work habits or attendance between the DARE and
- non-DARE students.
-
-
-
- 1987 National Institute of Justice DARE evaluation
-
- Reference: DeJong, W. A Short Term Evaluation of Project DARE (Drug
- Abuse Resistance Education): Preliminary Indications of
- Effectiveness. J. Drug Education, 17, 279-294 (1987).
-
- Funded by National Institute of Justice.
-
- Dare subjects: measured knowledge, attitudes, and self-reported
- ATOD use among 7th graders who had received DARE in 6th grade
- (n=288)
-
- Control subjects: measured same variables for 310 7th graders who
- did not receive DARE
-
- Results:
-
- 1) Found significantly lower ATOD use among DARE students vs non-
- DARE students.
-
- 2) Findings were strongest among boys.
-
- 3) Those DARE students who had used ATOD were more likely to have
- used ATOD only once.
-
- 4) DARE students were more likely to refuse offers of ATOD in role
- playing, when imagining being pressured into use by friends.
-
- 5) Found no significant differences in self-concept or self-esteem
- between DARE and non-DARE students.
-
- 6) Found no significant differences in knowledge and attitudes
- about ATOD use between DARE and non-DARE students.
-
- Long Beach California DARE evaluation 1989
-
- Reference: Becker H. and Agopian M. J. Drug Education, 22, 283-291
- (1992).
-
- DARE students: 5th graders who received DARE in Fall 1989 (n =
- approximately 1500 students). Administered pre- and post-DARE
- surveys, separated by approximately 18 weeks.
-
- Control group: approximately same number of non-DARE students who
- received pre- and post-DARE surveys.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) Found no difference among DARE and non-DARE students on ATOD
- use. Attributed these findings to the fact that levels of use of
- these drugs among 5th graders was minimal to begin with. Did not
- ask about intention to use drugs.
-
- 2) Found DARE students were more likely to report that they could
- resist solicitations from friends to use ATOD.
-
- Charleston, SC DARE evaluation, 1989-1990
-
-
- Reference: Harmon M. Results from a DARE Study Conducted in
- Charleston, South Carolina. Institute of Criminal Justice and
- Criminology, University of Maryland, 1991.
-
- DARE students: Administered pre- and post-DARE evaluations to 295
- students who received DARE. The pre- and post-DARE evaluations were
- approximately 20 weeks apart.
-
- Control students: Pre- and post-DARE time frame evaluations
- administered to 307 students who did not receive DARE.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE students were less likely to use alcohol in the last 30
- days.
-
- 2) DARE students were equally likely to use tobacco and other drugs
- as compared to non-DARE students.
-
- 3) DARE students had more healthy attitudes about ATOD use.
-
- 4) DARE students were more assertive.
-
- 5) DARE students were less likely to model peer drug use.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- North Carolina DARE evaluations
-
-
- 1989 report of DARE in North Carolina, preliminary report
-
- North Carolina Department of Public Instruction conducted an
- evaluation of DARE in Fall 1988.
-
- Paper presented by Christopher Ringwalt at American Public Health
- Association meeting, 1989.
-
- Conducted a short term evaluation, with pre- and post-tests given
- immediately before and immediately after the DARE curriculum
- (separated by approximately 17 weeks).
-
- Examined students in 12 schools with DARE and 13 schools without
- DARE. The two groups were approximately equivalent on racial and
- socioeconomic factors. Both DARE and non-DARE groups received the
- pre- and post-tests at about the same time.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE students were significantly more likely to view drug use
- and its consequences as undesirable.
-
- 2) DARE increased students' assertiveness (and thus, potentially,
- their ability to say no to drugs).
-
- 3) DARE students were more likely to recognize deceptive and
- misleading images and messages in alcohol and tobacco advertising.
-
- 4) DARE students more likely to report that their friends and peers
- held unfavorable attitudes about ATOD.
-
- 5) However, there was no evidence that DARE increased student's
- self-esteem.
-
- 6) Also, there was no evidence that DARE actually reduced students'
- use of alcohol, tobacco, other drugs (ATOD).
-
- 7) Also, there was no evidence that DARE reduced students'
- intention to use ATOD at some point in the future.
-
- 1991 report of DARE in North Carolina, full report
-
- Report of the full study of DARE in North Carolina.
-
- Reference: An Outcome Evaluation of Project DARE (Drug Abuse
- Resistance Education. Health Education Research, 6, 327-337 (1991).
-
- Evaluated 10 schools with DARE, 10 schools without DARE.
-
- Conducted pre- and post-testing for both groups with tests
- separated by 17 weeks.
-
- n = 635 DARE subjects
- n = 635 non-DARE subjects
-
- Results:
-
- 1) No evidence that DARE reduced adolescents' use of alcohol,
- cigarettes, or inhalants.
-
- 2) No evidence that DARE reduced adolescents' future intention to
- use these substances.
-
- 3) DARE did increase students' awareness of media portrayals of
- ATOD.
-
- 4) DARE did increase adolescents' awareness of the consequences of
- ATOD use.
-
- 5) DARE did increase students' assertiveness.
-
-
- Kentucky DARE evaluation 1989
-
- Kentucky conducted a 5 year longitudinal DARE evaluation and
- follow-up study.
-
- Funded by National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Research
- conducted by the Center for Prevention Research at University of
- Kentucky.
-
- This study monitored approximately 1500 students who received DARE
- in the 5th grade in Lexington KY during the 1987-1998 school year,
- compared to approximately 500 students in the same school system
- who did not receive DARE during the 6th grade in 1987-1988.
-
- These students were tracked and surveyed annually through the 10th
- grade (1991-1992 school year) to determine whether DARE influenced
- their ATOD use and attitudes.
-
- Preliminary study:
-
- Reference: DARE in Kentucky Schools 1988-1989. An Evaluation of the
- Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program. Faine, J. and Bohlander E.
- (1989).
-
- Sample: Approximately 1000 5th grade students receiving DARE in
- 1987-1988 and 437 5th grade students not receiving DARE.
-
- Conducted pre-test for both groups 1 week before DARE and a post-
- test 1 week after completion of DARE (approximately a 20 week
- separation) for both DARE and non-DARE groups.
-
- In addition, follow-up surveys were given to both groups 12-17
- months after completion of DARE, near the end of the 6th grade.
-
- These results are based on the follow-up survey, 12-17 months after
- the initial pre-test.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE did not significantly increase resistance to general peer
- pressure (on topic other than ATOD).
-
- 2) DARE students were actually had lower resistance to peer
- pressure to alcohol/drug use than non-DARE students (the opposite
- of expected direction).
-
- 3) There were no significant differences in DARE vs non-DARE
- students on positive attitudes toward drugs.
-
- 4) DARE did not change students attitudes toward cigarette use.
-
- 5) DARE did not change students attitudes toward alcohol use.
-
- 6) DARE did not change student attitudes about marijuana use.
-
- Colorado DARE evaluation 1990
-
-
- Reference: An Evaluation of the 1989 DARE Program in Colorado.
- Dukes, R. Center for Social Science Research, University of
- Colorado (1990).
-
- DARE sample: n=1250 students 5th and 6th graders who received DARE.
-
- Control group: no non-DARE control group.
-
- DARE-exposed students received pre- and post- tests during 1989.
- The pre- and post- tests were separated by approximately 18-19
- weeks within a semester.
-
- Results:
-
- 1) DARE students had significantly more negative attitudes toward
- drugs on the post-test as compared to the pre-test.
-
- 2) DARE-exposed students' self-concept, personal skills, and
- attitudes toward police also improved pre-test to post-test.
-
-
- Illinois DARE evaluation 1991
-
-
- Reference: Second Year Evaluation of DARE in Illinois. Rosenbaum,
- D. et al. University of Illinois, 1991.
-
- The DARE evaluation project began during the 1989-90 school year.
-
- The evaluation is scheduled to continue as a longitudinal study
- tracking DARE and non-DARE students for 7 years.
-
- To date, the DARE and non-DARE students have received one pre-test
- and two post-tests.
-
- The pre-test was administered prior to the DARE program.
-
- Post-test1 was administered immediately after completion of the
- DARE program.
-
- Post-test2 was administered 9 months after completion of the DARE
- program and 12 months after the initial pre-test.
-
- Tested DARE and non-DARE 5th and 6th graders at pre-test February
- 1990 and tested the same students at post-test2 as 6th and 7th
- graders 12 months later in February 1991.
-
- Sample size: Obtained completed pre- and post-test data on
- approximately 1330 DARE-exposed students and a similar number of
- non-DARE-exposed students.
-
- Results as measured at post-test2 (9 months after completion of
- DARE):
-
- 1) DARE did not reduce adolescents' alcohol use.
-
- 2) DARE did reduce lifetime cigarette use, which was attributed to
- preventing non-users from initiating smoking.
-
- 3) However, DARE did not reduce 30 day cigarette use (ie DARE did
- not influence current smokers to quit).
-
- 4) DARE did change students' perception about media influences
- concerning beer and cigarettes.
-
- 5) DARE did increase resistance to peer pressure.
-
- 6) The immediate effect of DARE on self esteem and assertiveness
- (as measured immediately after the completion of the DARE program)
- did not persist to the post-test2 period (9 months after the
- completion of DARE).
-
-
-
-
-
- School record results from the Illinois DARE evaluation:
-
-
- The school records of a separate post-hoc selected sample (control
- group) of matched students who did not receive DARE were compared
- to the school records of students receiving DARE.
-
- The school performance information was obtained by school record
- abstraction and from a short survey of academic issues administered
- to the students approximately 15-16 months after the DARE pre-test
- (May-June 1991).
-
- Sample size: approximately 250 DARE and 250 non-DARE students.
-
- Results:
-
- 7) DARE did not improve academic performance, as measured by the
- students' self-reported GPA or by the actual GPA as abstracted from
- school records.
-
- 8) DARE did not decrease the number of times tardy a student was
- tardy.
-
- 9) DARE did not decrease the number of times students reported
- being "in trouble at school".
-
- 10) DARE did not decrease the number of times students reported
- that they had cut classes.
-
- 11) DARE did not decrease the number of times a student had been
- referred to the school social worker.
-
- 12) However, DARE did improve some social behaviors at school. DARE
- students were less likely to have school disciplinary records than
- non-DARE students.
-
- Gallup Survey, July 1993
-
- Telephone survey of a national sample of n=632 young people age 11-
- 18 who have completed DARE. Margin of error was +/- 5%.
-
- Results: More than 90 percent of youth felt that DARE helped them
- avoid alcohol and drugs, increase their self confidence and deal
- effectively with peer pressure.
-
- No control (non-DARE) subjects were surveyed. No pre-DARE surveys
- were conducted.
-