What happen to JUST SAY NO and the DARE PROGRAM

Anonymous
I don’t know about other kids, but those programs work as intended on you! They scared me and I never have touched drugs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the DARE program ineffective? I have a 5 year old and 7 year old so I have very little experience with these issues.


They are ineffective, like abstinence programs, because they tell kids to say no to all the stuff they will all experiment with at some point.


For me, and yes I know I'm just one person, the DARE program and sex ed worked on me like a charm. And I'm glad they did. I grew up in Arlington in the 80s and 90s.


Congratulations. You are a rare, rare unicorn. Both approaches are well-documented failures.


Actually, no. It was effective for my friends as well. It was simply a program that worked well with our personalities, I guess.

Also, I remember the MTV special on ecstasy in the mid/late 90's. I was in college. They did brain scans of ecstasy users and their brains looked like swiss cheese. That was even more reinforcement for me. I was offered ecstasy and other drugs in college and I declined every time. Didn't give a crap what anyone thought. The only thing I did was smoke weed a handful of times.



If you smoked weed a handful of times I think the DARE program was basically a failure. You were supposed to just say no.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know about other kids, but those programs work as intended on you! They scared me and I never have touched drugs.


Worked as intended on me.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the DARE program ineffective? I have a 5 year old and 7 year old so I have very little experience with these issues.


They are ineffective, like abstinence programs, because they tell kids to say no to all the stuff they will all experiment with at some point.


For me, and yes I know I'm just one person, the DARE program and sex ed worked on me like a charm. And I'm glad they did. I grew up in Arlington in the 80s and 90s.


Congratulations. You are a rare, rare unicorn. Both approaches are well-documented failures.


Actually, no. It was effective for my friends as well. It was simply a program that worked well with our personalities, I guess.

Also, I remember the MTV special on ecstasy in the mid/late 90's. I was in college. They did brain scans of ecstasy users and their brains looked like swiss cheese. That was even more reinforcement for me. I was offered ecstasy and other drugs in college and I declined every time. Didn't give a crap what anyone thought. The only thing I did was smoke weed a handful of times.



If you smoked weed a handful of times I think the DARE program was basically a failure. You were supposed to just say no.


Wrong, disagree.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the DARE program ineffective? I have a 5 year old and 7 year old so I have very little experience with these issues.


They are ineffective, like abstinence programs, because they tell kids to say no to all the stuff they will all experiment with at some point.


For me, and yes I know I'm just one person, the DARE program and sex ed worked on me like a charm. And I'm glad they did. I grew up in Arlington in the 80s and 90s.


Congratulations. You are a rare, rare unicorn. Both approaches are well-documented failures.


Actually, no. It was effective for my friends as well. It was simply a program that worked well with our personalities, I guess.

Also, I remember the MTV special on ecstasy in the mid/late 90's. I was in college. They did brain scans of ecstasy users and their brains looked like swiss cheese. That was even more reinforcement for me. I was offered ecstasy and other drugs in college and I declined every time. Didn't give a crap what anyone thought. The only thing I did was smoke weed a handful of times.


I guess they should have made videos about the bad effects of weed, too.
Anonymous
JUST SAY NO was effective. I haven't seen that campaign around for many years, however.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is the DARE program ineffective? I have a 5 year old and 7 year old so I have very little experience with these issues.


They are ineffective, like abstinence programs, because they tell kids to say no to all the stuff they will all experiment with at some point.


For me, and yes I know I'm just one person, the DARE program and sex ed worked on me like a charm. And I'm glad they did. I grew up in Arlington in the 80s and 90s.


Congratulations. You are a rare, rare unicorn. Both approaches are well-documented failures.


Actually, no. It was effective for my friends as well. It was simply a program that worked well with our personalities, I guess.

Also, I remember the MTV special on ecstasy in the mid/late 90's. I was in college. They did brain scans of ecstasy users and their brains looked like swiss cheese. That was even more reinforcement for me. I was offered ecstasy and other drugs in college and I declined every time. Didn't give a crap what anyone thought. The only thing I did was smoke weed a handful of times.


I guess they should have made videos about the bad effects of weed, too.


They aren't as effective as movies about heroin such as Trainspotting. Now that kept me from doing any hard drugs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm not kidding when I say this. In middle school we had some in-jail guy present to use from one of those two programs. He killed himself in prison two weeks later. So, totally effective program.

Lol. We had a former ("Former") addict come in and talk to us in middle school. Even as a middle schooler it was painfully obvious how much he missed doing drugs!
Anonymous
In Loudoun, all 5th graders still compete DARE. It’s lame.
Anonymous
I’m also curious about this. While the old DARE was found to be ineffective, the new DARE is evidence based and is very effective. Does anyone know what APS uses? My kids are so young but I’ve been alarmed about the increase in drug use in the county. Here is more about the new DARE:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-new-d-a-r-e-program-this-one-works/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m also curious about this. While the old DARE was found to be ineffective, the new DARE is evidence based and is very effective. Does anyone know what APS uses? My kids are so young but I’ve been alarmed about the increase in drug use in the county. Here is more about the new DARE:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-new-d-a-r-e-program-this-one-works/


If they've found something that works, it's a huge mistake to name it after the thing that doesn't.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:In Loudoun, all 5th graders still compete DARE. It’s lame.



do they have the same problems with drugs and vaping that schools around the DMV area have?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m also curious about this. While the old DARE was found to be ineffective, the new DARE is evidence based and is very effective. Does anyone know what APS uses? My kids are so young but I’ve been alarmed about the increase in drug use in the county. Here is more about the new DARE:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-new-d-a-r-e-program-this-one-works/


PP here. I had the same thought but if you read the article you will see that the name is different.

If they've found something that works, it's a huge mistake to name it after the thing that doesn't.
Anonymous
It’s still around in schools but now it’s called FADE (Friends Against Drug Exposure).

If someone try to give you drugs, punch them in the face! Did you know shrooms hurt your tummy? Get your little hands up!

https://youtu.be/x9NiOhJ85ro
Anonymous
What happened to it? It worked! Everyone said No to Drugs and now we are cured
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