Drug Abuse Center

Good reasons for ignoring good evaluation: The case of the drug abuse resistance education (D.A.R.E.) program [An article from: Evaluation and Program Planning]
drug abuse resistance education
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This digital document is a journal article from Evaluation and Program Planning, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
D.A.R.E. is the most popular school-based drug abuse prevention program in the U.S., but evaluations have found that positive effects on students' knowledge, attitudes, and behavior (often observed right after the program) fade away over time. By late adolescence students exposed and not exposed to the program are indistinguishable. Some school districts ignore the evidence and continue to offer D.A.R.E. In our study of 16 school districts, we found two persuasive reasons: (1) Evaluations generally measure drug use as the main outcome, but school officials are skeptical that any low-input short-term program like D.A.R.E. can change adolescents' drug-taking behavior. (2) Evaluations often do not often report relationships between cops and kids. Improvement in these relationships is a main reason for many districts' continued implementation of D.A.R.E. Districts also mention other understandable although more problematic rationales for keeping D.A.R.E.


Product Information

  • Author S. Birkeland, E. Murphy-Graham, C. Weiss
  • Format HTML
  • Manufacturer Elsevier
  • Studio Elsevier

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