Monthly Archives: April 2018

Fixing What’s Wrong With Drug Education

A recent survey conducted by Join Together a program of the Boston University School of Public Health shows that few teachers believe that alcohol and other drug prevention programs work. Only 2 percent of more than 3,700 respondents felt that their school-based prevention program is effective. The report says that teachers are skeptical of the prevention programs they deliver. It goes on to say that teachers cite the need more relevant study materials, more time to do prevention, more support, and more training.

Although more training and enhanced study materials would certainly do no harm, how does this change the current destructive belief permeating our schools and our culture that drug prevention doesnt work? It is not a matter of more time, more study materials, or more training, but a need for a fundamental change in how we define prevention, set prevention goals, and understand how children adopt and reinforce healthy and unhealthy behaviors.

For three decades the United States has been waging an expensive and ineffective drug war a war more political than practical. In 1993 the federal government spent $1.7 billion on the drug war and in 1999 17.9 billion. The most ubiquitous of drug education programs DARE (Drug Awareness Resistance Education) which was started in Los Angeles in 1983 is plagued by research showing its lack of effectiveness. DARE currently costs taxpayers between 1 and 1.3 billion dollars a year. In addition, the DARE programs premise that early drug education inoculates kids from future drug use in high school is both nave and lacking a fundamental understanding of child development. In the most recent survey of adolescent drug trends conducted by Monitoring the Future, 48% of 12th graders had a drink within the last thirty days and by the time a student graduates from high school nearly half have tried an illicit drug – most likely marijuana. While recent trends in drinking and drug use show decreases in most categories, underage drinking and most notably marijuana use remain a regular experience of teenage life. What have we gotten for our money? And how does the current drug education approach reflect the reality that most teenagers face every weekend?

Teenage drug use is normalized in our culture. By the time most teens reach high school, they accept alcohol and some drug use by their peers as a common social activity. The popular notion that drinkers and drug users are outcasts and deviants conveniently ignores the reality that many teens drink including student leadership, athletes, active and involved good students. Scare tactics and exaggerated drug effects only work when your audience does not have access to other information. This generation of students has more access to information than any other generation in time. This will most likely be the case for subsequent generations. Manipulation, coercion, and exaggerated claims are not tolerated by students.

Prevention programs need to support and validate those students who choose to delay their drinking and abstain from other drugs. Programs need to help students effectively communicate concerns to friends who may be experiencing problems with their drinking and drug use and to connect those friends to helping resources in the community. Finally, prevention programs need to offer suggestions to students to minimize the risks associated with drinking and drug use such as frequency and quantity of use. Promoting risk reduction strategies no more condones drinking than the suggestion of wearing a seat belt condones speeding.

We are in a crisis right now. It is not a drug crisis, but a crisis of belief and faith. We are loosing faith in the idea that we can be effective. We are giving in to the fear that any deviation from the path of abstinence-based zero tolerance education is an endorsement of drinking. The results of giving in to fear are the growing popularity of random drug testing programs, locker searches and drug sniffing dogs. We dont need to catch more kids, but to connect with more kids. We dont need to make an example of a student, but be examples for students of healthy living and compassionate care.

Tips To Choosing A Financial Education Consultant

The main goal of a financial education consultant is to help organizations capably and productively implement financial literacy programs. They help organizations choose curriculum that is a good fit for the participants. Our current economic situation makes it vital for colleges, schools, nonprofits, and other organizations who understand the importance of providing our youth with a practical financial education to use the services of a financial education consultant.

The job of a financial education consultant is to evaluate current fiscal literacy initiatives and the audience the financial literacy courses are being delivered to. They evaluate your goals, objectives and examine the direction you want to take your financial literacy program. Then a consultant will make recommendations so the financial program runs smoothly and successfully accomplishes your organizations goals.

A financial consultant should also help to save your organization money. Often they provide turnkey solutions to your financial literacy program needs. A consultant can provide financial literacy curriculum, financial camps, financial educator training and resources to help you receive sponsorships and grant money.

Consultants not only help organizations develop training programs but they also help them deliver ‘money skill’ training more effectively. Just one simple tip like relating money to lifestyle can make a big difference in the rentention of the material taught.

Today’s youth are not focused on just “money.” It’s what money allows them to do that motivates our children to learn about personal finance. Uncover their personal dreams and find out how they want to live their day-to-day life. Then relate their aspirations to earning and managing money to help them reach their goals faster. This little adjustment can make the difference so that people are motivated to take positive action.

With the recent economy there is a major shortage of financial education consultants. With the current trend to provide more and more people with a life changing financial education this is a career that offers a bright future.

There are many organizations that need financial education consultants to educate their students, employers and people they serve. It is advised to work with a certified financial educator that understands the needs of the organization. Once they receive their financial education consultant designation they have the skill sets needed to create holistic financial education programs that can meet a wide variety of objectives.

Certified financial education training is extensive because a financial education consultant must have mastery of many areas. They need to know how to teach financial literacy programs, evaluate the effectiveness, how to fund financial literacy programs, evaluate teachers, design financial literacy lesson plans, build financial education based business and a host of other responsibilities.

A financial education consultant is committed to helping organizations effectively implement financial literacy programs. Their role includes saving time and money as well as ensuring these organizations provide practical financial literacy instruction so the participants maximize the benefits they receive from the program.