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From: "Mises Daily Article" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Mises Daily Article" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: Fwd: The Truth about D.A.R.E.
Date: 3/31/2003 8:20:35 AM



  From:   "Mises Daily Article" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  To:     "Mises Daily Article" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  Subject:The Truth about D.A.R.E.
  Date:   Mon, 31 Mar 2003 08:20:35 -0600



  http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=1188

  The Truth about D.A.R.E.

  by Paul Armentano


  [March 31, 2003]


  If popularity was the sole measure of success then D.A.R.E., the "Drug
Image
  Abuse Resistance Education" curriculum that is now taught in 80 percent
  of school districts nationwide, would be triumphant.  However, if one is
to
  gauge success by actual results, then America's most pervasive and
expensive

  youth drug education program is (and always has been) a gigantic and
  incontrovertible flop.

  So says the General Accounting Office (GAO) in a scathing new report
that

  finds the politically popular program has had "no statistically significant
  long-term effect on preventing youth illicit drug use."  In addition,
  students who participate in D.A.R.E. demonstrate "no significant
  differences... [in] attitudes toward illicit drug use [or] resistance to
  peer pressure" compared to children who had not been exposed to the
program,
  the GAO determined.


  Their critique was the latest in a long line of stinging evaluations that
  have plagued D.A.R.E. throughout its 20-year history.  Established in 1983
  by former Los Angeles police chief Daryl—All casual drug users should be

  taken out and shot!—Gates, the D.A.R.E. elementary school curriculum
  consists of 17 lessons—taught by D.A.R.E.-trained uniform police officers—
  urging kids to resist the use of illicit drugs, including the underage use
  of alcohol and tobacco.  Upon completion of the curriculum, which
often
  relies on scare tactics and transparent "just say no" ideology, graduates
  "pledge to lead a drug-free life."  Numerous studies indicate few do.


  These include:


   *A 1991 University of Kentucky study of 2,071 sixth graders that found no
    difference in the past-year use of cigarettes, alcohol or marijuana
among
    DARE graduates and non-graduates two years after completing the
    program.

   *A 1996 University of Colorado study of over 940 elementary school
students

    that found no difference with regard to illicit drug use, delay of
    experimentation with illicit drugs, self-esteem, or resistance to peer
    pressure among D.A.R.E. graduates and non-graduates three years after
    completing the program.

   *A 1998 University of Illinois study of 1,798 elementary school students
    that found no differences with regards to the recent use of illicit drugs

    among D.A.R.E. graduates and non-graduates six years after completing
the
    program.

   *A 1999 follow-up study by the University of Kentucky that found no
    difference in lifetime, past-year, or past-month use of marijuana among
    D.A.R.E. graduates and non-graduates 10 years after completing the
    program.


  In fact, over the years so many studies have assailed D.A.R.E.'s
  effectiveness that by 2001 even its proponents admitted it needed
serious
  revamping.  However, rather than shelving the failed program altogether,
  D.A.R.E.'s advocates called for expanding its admittedly abysmal
curriculum

  to target middle-school and high-school students—a move that was lauded
by
  many federal officials and peer educators despite a track record that
would
  spell the demise for most any other program.


  So why does D.A.R.E. remain so immensely popular with politicians (Both
Bush
  I and Clinton endorsed "National D.A.R.E. Day.") and school administrators
  despite its stunning lack of demonstrated efficacy?  Researchers writing
in
  the American Psychological Association's Journal of Consulting and
Clinical
  Psychology offer two explanations.


  The first is that for many civic leaders, teaching children to refrain from
  drugs simply "feels good."  Therefore, advocates of the program perceive
any
  scrutiny of their effectiveness to be overly critical and unnecessary.


  The second explanation is that D.A.R.E. and similar youth anti-drug
  education programs appear to work.  After all, most kids who graduate
  D.A.R.E. do not engage in drug use beyond the occasional beer or
marijuana
  cigarette.  However, this reality is hardly an endorsement of D.A.R.E., but

  an acknowledgement of the statistical fact that most teens—even without
  D.A.R.E.—never engage in any significant drug use.

  Of course, those looking for a third explanation could simply follow the

  money trail.  Even though D.A.R.E. has been a failure at persuading kids to
  steer away from drugs, it has been a marketing cash cow—filling its
coffers
  with hundreds of millions of dollars in annual federal aid.  (According to
  the GAO, exact totals are unavailable but outside experts have placed
this
  figure at anywhere from $600 to $750 million per year.)


  In addition, police departments spend an additional $215 million yearly on
  D.A.R.E. to pay for their officers' participation in the program, according
  to the New York Times.  But this total may be only the tip of the iceberg.
  According to a preliminary economic assessment by Le Moyne College in
New

  York, the total economic costs of officers' training and participation in
  D.A.R.E. is potentially closer to $600 million.

  Regardless of its ultimate financial cost to taxpayers, there is no doubt

  that D.A.R.E. has become its own special interest group—aggressively
  lobbying state and federal governments to maintain its swelling budget.
  Like a junkie, D.A.R.E. is addicted to the money, and will do whatever it
  takes to get it.  Meanwhile, its proponents remain in a state of denial,
  caring more about political posturing than embracing a youth drug
education
  program that really works.  After 20 years of failure, isn't it about time

  someone dares to tell the truth?



  Paul Armentano is a senior policy analyst for The NORML Foundation in
  Washington, DC.  He may be contacted via e-mail
at:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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