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Drugs and alcohol
continue to harm America's children. As a response
to continuing concerns about the impact of substance use
and abuse, the Caribou Police Department and Caribou
School Department incorporated the DARE component into
the grade six curriculum, which aims to increase student
awareness of citizens' rights and responsibilities under
the law while fostering positive attitudes toward police
officers and law enforcement. DARE was originally
founded in 1983 by the Los Angeles Police Department and
the Los Angeles Unified School District and went
nationwide in 1987. Helping students make correct
decisions about alcohol and drug abuse is what the DARE
program is about and the Caribou Police Department and
Caribou Public Schools have made this an integral part of
the Police-School partnership.
The Major goal of DARE is to prevent substance abuse among school children through lessons that focus on: Providing skills to recognize and resist social and peer pressure to experiment with tobacco, alcohol and drugs. Helping enhance self esteem. Teaching positive alternatives to substance abuse. Developing skills in risk assessment and decision making. Building interpersonal and communications skills. DARE objectives have been achieved by training carefully selected, veteran law enforcement officers to teach the structured, sequential curriculum in schools. DARE instructors complete special training in human relations and communications skills, multicultural awareness and children's issues. They employ a variety of teaching strategies and encourage a healthy exchange of ideas and feelings in the learning process. |