Education
is one of the most commonly used strategies for attempting to discourage
young people from using alcohol, tobacco, or illegal
drugs. Schools offer opportunities to reach the most children and
also serve as important settings for reaching specific at-risk
groups, such as children with behavior problems and learning disabilities.
In addition to school-based health and prevention education for
students, education and training efforts aimed at adults who interact
with youth can also contribute to prevention.
For many years, prevention education for youth
focused on the dangers of drug use. The assumption was that kids
who understood
the risks inherent in using these substances would make healthier
choices than those who did not. But, as researchers began studying
these educational programs, they discovered that increased knowledge
doesn’t necessarily keep kids off drugs. Other pressures
and dynamics of youth—such as peer acceptance, rebelliousness,
and perceptions of invincibility or immortality—may actually
override the role of knowledge in a young person’s decision
about whether to experiment with alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs.
Instead, what young people most need to learn—and what seems
to help them best avoid using substances—are the skills to
refuse drugs, to think critically about the messages they receive
from peers and from the media, and to make healthier choices in
all areas of their lives.1
Certain sets of skills are particularly effective in preventing
the onset and reducing the continued use of alcohol, tobacco, and
other drugs.2 These skills include the following:
- Empathy
- Social problem-solving or impulse control
- Communication
- Stress management or coping
- Media resistance
- Assertiveness
Belief development or normative education.
Research has also identified a number of factors
that enhance the effectiveness of prevention education programs
for young people:
- Programs should include an adequate “dosage” of
instruction. At a minimum, skills-based instruction programs
should include 10 to 15 sessions
per year followed by another 10 to 15 booster sessions. Research consistently
shows that the longer the program, the more enduring the changes.3
- Programs
should reach children from kindergarten through high school.4
It is especially important
to reach students in the
middle school or junior high years. During this time of transition,
many young people begin smoking cigarettes and drinking alcohol.
It is also important to reach young people during both non-school
and school hours.
- Programs should use age-appropriate,
interactive teaching methods.5 Interactive approaches include
modeling, role playing,
discussion, group feedback, reinforcement, extended practice,
cooperative learning, and student-centered learning techniques.
- Programs should foster pro-social attachment
to the school and community. Students’ lack of attachment
to school may be related to unsatisfying academic experiences.
Prevention interventions
may address this issue by including components that offer academic
skill building for students.
- Programs should include strong peer
education components.6
- Programs should include an educational
component for parents, with information about drugs for both
them and their children.7
Parent training, delivered in conjunction with programs for their
children at school, can enable parents to reinforce healthy messages
at home.
One of the most important factors that determines
a program’s
success is the extent to which teachers are provided with both
training and ongoing support in the content and methods of life
skills education. One program that uses this approach is the Life
Skills Training Program,8 designed to help adolescents develop
personal, social, and drug-resistance skills.

Parents aren’t the only adults who can play a significant role in preventing
substance abuse. Public education can raise awareness among broad numbers of
people and strengthen environmental approaches to prevention. Server training
programs can teach bartenders and wait staff to avoid serving minors and intoxicated
customers. Merchants can be educated about the laws and penalties for selling
alcohol or tobacco to underage customers. Employee assistance programs can
train staff to work with employees who may have issues with alcohol or other
drugs—or who are dealing with a family member who does.9 It is important
for those of us in prevention to understand that education strategies needn’t
be limited to school-based curricula, but that they can—and should—be
broadly applied to the many formal and informal systems that constitute a community.

You
have completed Module 6.
Please proceed to Activity 6: Applying Education
Strategies.
References
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