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Strath Haven

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Title: Strath Haven


1
NAVIGATING THE HIGH SCHOOL YEARS LIFE OUTSIDE
THE CLASSROOM
  • Strath Haven
  • High School
  • Home and School Association Meeting
  • March 12, 2015

2
Overview of Presentation
  • Preventative Measures
  • Professional Resources
  • Attendance
  • Student Assistance Program
  • Characteristics of Safe Schools
  • Senior Survey
  • Research on Marijuana Use
  • Recommendations and Resources for Parents

3
Professional Resources
  • Staff involvement is essential to the maintenance
    of a healthy school climate
  • Counselors
  • Crisis counselor
  • Nurse
  • Psychologist
  • Deans
  • Faculty and staff
  • Health curriculum Community speakers Mock Crash
  • Administrators
  • Social worker
  • SAP Team

4
Focus on Attendance
  • Students are safest when they report to school
    regularly and on time
  • Attendance rates have been maintained at or above
    95.0 at SHHS, with an annual rate of 96.

5
Student Assistance Program
  • Team meetings are held every other week
  • Team includes Social worker, deans, counselors,
    trained teachers, principal, nurse, psychologist,
    Crozer representative
  • Approximately 100-120 students are referred and
    addressed through the program each year
  • Referrals come from all areas of the community,
    and address many concerns
  • Additional programs include Groups, Peer
    Educators, Diversity Trainers

6
Characteristics of Safe Schools
  • Positive faculty role models
  • Respect for diversity and difference
  • Communication between students and adults
  • Constructive management of conflicts
  • Code of silence broken
  • Relationships established between students and
    staff

7
  • SENIOR CLASS SURVEY
  • Monitoring the Future administered to Classes of
    2006 and 2007
  • Senior survey administered each spring
  • National data available with varied areas of
    emphasis available at www.monitoringthefuture.org,
    www.drugabuse.gov.

8
Attendance Indicators
9
Tobacco Indicators
10
Alcohol Indicators
11
Marijuana Indicators
12
Usage Indicators
39 report marijuana usage, other drugs
significantly lower than national data, but
still a risk, given misuse of prescription drugs
and others
13
Risks of Marijuana Use
  • Schizophrenia
  • Respiratory diseases and cancer
  • Maternal use risks
  • Impaired/reduced
  • Verbal and logical reasoning skills
  • Short and long term memory
  • Mathematical and verbal skill deficits
  • Motivation, self-esteem, interpersonal
    relationships
  • Increased aggression
  • Addiction

14
Marijuana IS an addictive substance
15
Marijuana Addiction
  • Addiction difficulty controlling your drug use
    and cannot stop even though it interferes with
    many aspects of your life.
  • Marijuana accounted for 4.5 million of estimated
    7.1 million Americans dependent on or abusing
    illicit drugs (NSDUH, 2010).
  • In 2009, 18 of people aged 12 entering drug
    abuse treatment programs reported marijuana as
    their primary drug of abuse 61 of persons under
    15 reported marijuana as their primary drug of
    abuse.
  • Marijuana addiction similar to nicotine
    withdrawal makes it hard to quit.

16
Academic Consequences of Marijuana Use
  • A recent study found that those who used
    marijuana heavily in their teens and continued
    through adulthood showed a permanent drop in IQ
    of 8 points.
  • Youth with an average grade of D or below were
    more than four times as likely to have used
    marijuana in the past year than youth with an
    average grade of A.
  • College students with high levels (17 days/month)
    of marijuana use were twice as likely as those
    with minimal use (less than one day/month) to
    have an enrollment gap while in college

17
Disciplinary Consequences of Legalization
18
Additional Risks of Marijuana Use
  • Marijuana is the most prevalent illegal drug
    detected in impaired drivers, fatally injured
    drivers, and motor vehicle crash victims.
  • According to the American Council for Drug
    Education in NY, employees who abuse drugs are
  • 10 times more likely to miss work
  • 3.6 times more likely to be involved in on-the
    job incidents
  • 5 times more likely to file a workers comp
    claim
  • And regular users cant pass drug tests!

19
Policy 227 First Offense
  • Referral to SAP Program
  • Suspension from school
  • Participation in substance abuse program
  • School/community service
  • Suspension from representation in extracurricular
    activities

20
Law Enforcement Perspective
  • Chief David Splain, Nether Providence
  • Chief Brian Craig, Swarthmore
  • Detective Mike Erickson, Nether Providence
  • Officer James Irey, Nether Providence
  • Officer Mike Markunas, Nether Providence

21
Online Resources
  • SAM Smart Approaches to Marijuana
    http//learnaboutsam.com/
  • Above the Influence http//www.abovetheinfluence.c
    om/facts/drugsmarijuana
  • CALM Citizens Against Legalizing Marijuana
    http//www.calmca.org/
  • Office of National Drug Control Policy
    http//www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/frequently-askedqu
    estions-and-facts-about-marijuana
  • http//www.capabilitiesinc.com/research.html

22
Online Resources, cont.
  • www.casacolumbia.org
  • www.mentorfoundation.org/Uploads/
  • Adolescent_Brain_Booklet.pdf
  • http//www.caron.org/knowledge-library/teenage-abu
    se-addiction/marijuana
  • SHHS Library Media Center
  • Teen Health and Wellness Database

23
Recommendations The Significant Seven
  • 1. Identification with viable role models
  • 2. Identification with and responsibility for a
    meaningful role in family life
  • 3. Faith in personal resources to solve problems
  • 4. Self-discipline, self-control, ability to
    learn from experience (intrapersonal skills)
  • 5. Communication, cooperation, empathy
    (interpersonal skills)
  • 6. Adaptability, flexibility, integrity (systemic
    skills)
  • 7. Decision-making, ethics (judgment skills)

Author Dr. Stephen Glenn
24
Setting Effective Boundaries
  • Eliminate electronic distractions in the evening
  • Know your childs social group
  • In order to be effective, boundaries for teens
    must
  • Be stated clearly and briefly in simple language
  • Meet recognized and understood needs
  • Have clear consequences for violations
  • Be enforceable
  • Be negotiated
  • Be common knowledge

25
Hands On Parents
  • Monitor what teens watch on television
  • Monitor what teens do on the internet
  • Put restrictions on music teens buy
  • Know where teens are after school and on weekends
  • Expect to be told the truth by teens about where
    they are going
  • Are very aware of teens academic performance
  • Impose a curfew
  • Make it clear they would be extremely upset if
    teen used marijuana
  • Eat dinner with teens most every night
  • Turn off the television during dinner
  • Assign teens regular chores
  • Have an adult present when teens arrive home from
    school
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