Anonymous wrote:The education needs to come from both schools and parents/caregivers. We don't have any at our son's school, which I find quite disturbing. It actually makes me consider switching him to a different school for high school.
The drug education in my high school probably saved my life. It was given by a recovering alcoholic. We were taught how to calculate blood alcohol level and exactly what happens as the level increases. She also talked about myths and facts related to alcohol and other drugs. Hearing her personal perspective and the scientific information changed my view and made me more empathetic and mindful of my safety. I'm still grateful for that instruction decades later.
Anonymous wrote:Our school (SFS) does not (as far as I have been able to learn) conduct any health-oriented or other presentations along the lines of "Just Say No" (the variation my generation heard). This is disappointing for a couple reasons, not the least of which is that last school year, a Sidwell junior overdosed. The school had a teaching opportunity there, which they didn't take.
Do other area independent schools do any of this type of teaching? Sidwell has "health relationship / health online behavior" workshops, but not drugs/alcohol. Seems like a missed opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:They should. A Sidwell student OD last year sadly over break. Even several students shared that the school did not mention it.
Anonymous wrote:Holton has a mandatory evening alcohol symposium for 10th graders and at least one of their parents that’s done well. Goes beyond just warning kids, and includes a section on different types of parent attitudes regarding alcohol and statistically which ones are less likely to lead to heavy drinking in kids than others (compares ramifications of those that provide alcohol, those that don’t provide but ignore, those that allow it for family celebrations, etc). Gives parents good insight and creates an opportunity for good parent child conversation (yes you can do this without school, but it facilitates open dialogue when all your classmates are having similar conversations).