D.A.R.E. Defines
Our Nation At Risk
The primary goals of D.A.R.E. are to prevent substance abuse among school
children and to help them develop effective gang and violence resistance
techniques. The core curriculum targets young children to prepare them to
avoid substance abuse and violence as they enter adolescence.
The number of students abusing drugs and alcohol in the U.S. is at the
highest level of any industrialized nation in the world.
The rapid increase of students experimenting with drugs has begun to
taper off, but the starting age gets younger and younger.
For example, a poll by Weekly Reader Magazine shows a quarter of all
fourth graders feel pressured to try alcohol or marijuana.
The lethal aim of drug dealers is to catch children at an early age and
to influence them into developing drug habits. Once the children are
addicted, dealers have deadly control over their lives. Adolescents may be
susceptible to taking drugs or alcohol because their effect symbolizes a
false value of independence, rebellion and adulthood. Thoughts of risking
health and well being seem to be only of a minor importance.
D.A.R.E. lessons focus on:
 | Acquiring skills to resist peer pressure |
 | Enhancing self-esteem |
 | Learning about positive alternatives to substance abuse |
 | Learning anger management and conflict resolution skills |
 | Developing risk assessment and decision making skills |
 | Reducing violence |
 | Building interpersonal and communication skills |
 | Resisting gang involvement |
|
D.A.R.E. aims at reducing these risks by providing children with the
knowledge, positive attitudes and skills needed to make healthy decisions,
especially those related to alcohol and drug use.