Drug Abuse
Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) is a collaborative effort by certified law enforcement
officers, educators, students, parents, and the community, to offer an educational program
in the classroom to prevent drug abuse and violence among children and youth.
The emphasis of D.A.R.E. is to help students
recognize and resist the many direct and subtle pressures that influence them to
experiment with alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, inhalants, and other drugs or to engage in
violence. The D.A.R.E. program offers preventive strategies to enhance those protective
factors, especially bonding to the family, school, and community. These strategies focus
on the development of social competence, communication skills, self-esteem, empathy,
decision making, conflict resolution, sense of purpose, independence, and positive
alternative activities to drug abuse and other destructive behavior.
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The program content for
D.A.R.E. is organized into seventeen 45-60 minute lessons taught by a uniformed law
enforcement officer in the classroom. The Auburn Police Department currently has six
certified D.A.R.E. instructors, each one assigned to a particular elementary school.
D.A.R.E. is taught to each of the 5th grade classes in the Auburn School District, both
public and parochial schools, by each elementary school's respective D.A.R.E. Officer. |

Auburn Police D.A.R.E. Car
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In addition, three of the six D.A.R.E. officers are
certified to instruct the Middle School D.A.R.E. program - (8th Grade Level) which
consists of 10 consecutive days taught in conjunction with the student's Health
curriculum. The advanced D.A.R.E. program consists of topics relating to Drug Abuse and
Violence, and how to resolve conflicts without the use of violence.
D.A.R.E., in both the elementary level and the middle
school level, offers a variety of interactive group participation, cooperative-learning
activities, which are designed to encourage students to solve problem of major importance
in their lives. The D.A.R.E. programs is considered just one step towards decreasing the
current drug problem as well as to the ever increasing problem with youth violence in our
society.
PO Michael Roden, D.A.R.E. Officer

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