Title: Strath Haven
1NAVIGATING THE HIGH SCHOOL YEARS LIFE OUTSIDE
THE CLASSROOM
- Strath Haven
- High School
- Home and School Association Meeting
- March 12, 2015
2Overview 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
3Professional 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
4Focus 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.
5Student 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
6Characteristics 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- 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.
8Attendance Indicators
9Tobacco Indicators
10Alcohol Indicators
11Marijuana Indicators
12Usage Indicators
39 report marijuana usage, other drugs
significantly lower than national data, but
still a risk, given misuse of prescription drugs
and others
13Risks 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
14Marijuana IS an addictive substance
15Marijuana 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.
16Academic 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
17Disciplinary Consequences of Legalization
18Additional 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!
19Policy 227 First Offense
- Referral to SAP Program
- Suspension from school
- Participation in substance abuse program
- School/community service
- Suspension from representation in extracurricular
activities -
20Law 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
21Online 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
22Online 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
23Recommendations 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
24Setting 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
25Hands 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