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Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Program. Mrs. Patrice Harris Intervention Supervisor. Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Program (AKA Title IV).
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Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Program Mrs. Patrice Harris Intervention Supervisor
Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Program (AKA Title IV) • The Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Act is Part A of Title IV—21st Century Schools authorized under the NoChild Left Behind Act of 2001. • The No Child Left Behind Act substantially revised the Elementary and Secondary Act of 1965 (ESEA) in a manner designed to provide all of America’s school children with the opportunity to achieve academic success.
Program Overview • The purpose of the Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities (SDFSC) Program is to foster a safe and drug-free learning environment that supports academic achievement. • The SDFSC Program is a federally funded initiative which supports programs that prevent violence in and around schools; that prevent the illegal use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs; that involve parents and communities; and that are coordinated with related federal, state, and community efforts and resources to foster a safe and drug-free learning environment.
Program Overview • SDFSC funds may be used for drug prevention and education programs (PreK-12); violence prevention; professional development for drug, alcohol, and violence prevention; implementation of strategies; drug abuse resistance education programs; program evaluations; and conflict resolution programs. • All of these efforts together form a comprehensive plan to promote peaceful resolution to conflict and to reduce the demand for and use of alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and other drugs by school-age children.
Goal of the SDFSC Program • The goal of the SDFSC Program is to ensure a comprehensive prevention and intervention program designed to create a safe, healthy, and successful academic learning environment, which will maximize students’ physical and emotional safety, and academic success.
Objectives of the SDFSC Program • Decrease rate of incidents related to violence • Decrease the number of students using tobacco, alcohol, or other drugs • Increase student achievement and participation in extracurricular activities and organizations • Increase parent and community participation
Principles of Effectiveness • Provides the framework to assist states and local entities in designing, implementing, and evaluating high quality programs and achieving measurable results.
Principles of Effectiveness Must be based on: • An assessment of objective data regarding the incidence of violence and illegal drugs in both elementary and secondary schools, as well as the communities to be served • An established set of performance measures aimed at ensuring that schools and communities to be served have a safe, orderly, and drug-free learning environment.
Principles of Effectiveness • Scientifically based research demonstrating that the program to be used will reduce violence and illegal drug use • Analysis of data reasonably available at the time of the prevalence of risk factors including: • High or increasing rates of reported cases of child abuse and domestic violence; • Protective factors, buffers, assets; or • Other variables identified through scientifically based research that occur in schools and communities
Message and Materials • The program must convey a clear and consistent message that illegal use of drugs and acts of violence are wrong and harmful.
Advisory Council • As a part of the requirements from the Alabama State Department of Education in regards to each school system’s implementation of their SDFSC program, an advisory council is to be established. • This committee, which is comprised of a representative group of persons, has several different purposes.
Advisory Council Members’ Responsibilities • To assist with the development of the SDFSC application; • To assist in the dissemination of information regarding the Baldwin County Public School System’s drug and violence prevention programs; • To advise the Baldwin County Public School System on the coordination of SDFSC activities with other related programs and on the administration of SDFSC programs, projects, and activities; and • To review and evaluate the SDFSC goals and objectives in order to make recommendations to improve drug and violence prevention programs.
Advisory Council Members 2010-2011 • Mrs. Edith Atkinson, BMIS Teacher • Mrs. Wanda Fox-Pierre, Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment Coordinator, Department of Mental Health • Deputy Jeff Spaller, School Resource Officer, Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office • Mrs. Kaye Dunn, Nurse Supervisor, Baldwin County Health Department • Mr. Bill Ford, Director, Juvenile Detention Center • Mrs. Janice Hendrickson, Baldwin Youth Services • Mrs. Sonnie Coleman, RBDH Teacher
Advisory Council Members 2010-2011 • Dr. Joyce Woodburn, Secondary Coordinator • Mrs. Golden Gray, BMMS Teacher • Mrs. Pam Magee, Federal Programs Coordinator • Mrs. Paula Watkins, Community Volunteer • Mrs. Teresa Hunter, DPM Counselor • Mr. Richard Zitnik, Non-Public School Representative • Mrs. Ashley Milner, Parent Representative
Pride Surveys • Baldwin County Public Schools must comply with the No Child Left Behind legislation requiring an anonymous student survey about alcohol and drug use and violence. • The survey information assists the school system in assessing our success or failure to convince students of the health and safety value of not using alcohol or illegal drugs. • The Pride Survey is the anonymous survey that has been chosen to assist us in gathering this required information.
Pride Surveys • The Pride Survey provides information on the incidence and prevalence, age of onset, perception of health risk, and perception of social disapproval of drug use and violence by youth. • Results of the Pride Survey from the past five school years are available on the school system website (www.bcbe.org) under Instructional Support, School Counseling/Intervention.