A Report of
the Conference on the
Future Directions for Drug Abuse Prevention
March 1998
The University of Arizona
Contents
Acknowledgements
This weighty
question, on the mind of nearly every educator, is discussed practically
and with hope in A Vision of Protective Schools: Linking Drug Abuse
Prevention with Student Success. The new handbook, a publication
of the College of Education's Smith Prevention Initiative, contains
the ideas of 14 prevention experts, teachers and principals.
The report
is the result of the Conference on the Future Directions for Drug
Abuse Prevention, held in March 1998 at the University of Arizona,
and represents the collective vision of the specialists in drug
abuse prevention, violence prevention, school health, curriculum
development, classroom practice and federal policy who took part.
Because the
risk factors for substance abuse, violence, teen pregnancy, school
failure and delinquency overlap, a strong prevention effort can
minimize a host of student problems, the experts say. It is possible
to protect young people from a range of negative life outcomes with
a minimum of specialized interventions, they conclude.
The experts
argue that rather than taking away from academics, effective prevention
is highly compatible with good education and that prevention efforts
should be structured to be a pervasive feature of a healthy school
climate. The handbook identifies 10 characteristics of protective
schools. In each section, the ideal representation for that characteristic
is outlined and then several achievable suggestions for "How do
we get there from here?" are listed.
Kris Bosworth,
Ph.D.
Smith Initiatives for Prevention and Education
College of Education
The University of Arizona
P.O. Box 210069
Tucson, AZ 85721-0069
(520) 626-4964
e-mail: boswortk@u.arizona.edu
Web site: http://www.drugstats.org
© 1999, The Arizona Board of Regents