D.A.R.E. was started in 1983 in Los Angeles. It was designed by educators and
law enforcement with the idea that a demand reduction program would educated our
young prior to their first encounter with drugs. They are taught how to avoid
getting involved with drugs and violent situations in the first place. The
D.A.R.E. program now incorporates anti-violence training in its curriculum,
also. D.A.R.E. has proven to be so successful that it has become the most
effective and widely used drug education program and is taught in all 50 states
and in some foreign countries.
The success of D.A.R.E. can be contributed to the carefully structured
curriculum that focuses on topics of concern to our young people, even at a very
early age. The instructor of the D.A.R.E. program is a trained, streetwise
police officer who is empathetic to, and taken seriously by, the students. The
officers, by their example, become positive role models to the students. While
they teach in uniform, their personalities and knowledge quickly break down any
pre-conceived notions of us and them between themselves and the students. The
curriculum teaches the students the consequences of using drugs; how to resist
peer pressure; ways to say no; being assertive; decision making skills;
avoidance of risk taking; and, dealing with problems.
The D.A.R.E. program is taught at all elementary & middle schools within
the city of St. Charles (a total of 14 schools). Each D.A.R.E. officer is
committed to the youth of the community and works closely with the school
administrators and teachers. When not teaching at their assigned schools, the
officers provide various programs to organizations and other groups. |