Drug use about average, school survey says
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Andrew Edwards
A survey on substance abuse and safety in the Huntington Beach City
School District shows drug and alcohol use among Surf City students
is on par with other California communities, with slight spikes in
alcohol and cigarette use.
But educators found positive indicators that suggest local
children are learning to lead healthy lives.
“We have around average amounts in the areas of alcohol, tobacco,
drug use,” said Lynn Bogart, assistant superintendent of curriculum
and instruction. Students in the fifth and seventh grades
participated in the California Healthy Kids Survey, which was
conducted in March. Results were presented to the board of education
on Tuesday. Students had to have their parents’ permission to answer
questions on use of chemical substances, campus safety and their
attitudes about school. The district conducted the survey in 2001 and
2003. This was the first time any fifth-graders participated.
The amount of seventh-graders admitting to smoking marijuana or
cigarettes hovered around the state’s baseline scores and the
district’s numbers from last year. In 2004, 8% of seventh-graders
claimed to have tried marijuana at least once, the same amount as
last year and in the California baseline score, which is based on the
2001 survey. Cigarette use in the district jumped slightly to 22%, up
from 20% last year. The statewide number was 21%.
Alcohol use among district seventh-graders also increased over the
past year, from 13% to 15%, above the baseline score of 10%, a number
that bothered school board President Catherine McGough.
“I don’t want anyone that age doing that,” she said.
The survey did not report the number of fifth-graders who used
alcohol, though the results show 4% of fifth-graders have tried
cigarettes and 1% have experimented with marijuana, indicating
substance abuse is present in Surf City’s elementary schools.
“The community just believes this is a perfect place to live and
the kids are not at risk, but I know that’s not true,” board member
Shirley Carey said.
When students were asked if they felt safe at school, 58% of
fifth-graders said they did, while only 16% of seventh-graders gave
the same answer. Bogart downplayed the idea that students feel like
they are in danger in the district’s schools.
The question, Bogart said, was very specific and asked students if
they felt “very safe at all times.” The question not only asked
students if they felt threatened by physical violence but also less
overt antisocial acts like teasing or bullying.
About one-quarter of seventh-graders said they worried about
getting beaten up in the past year, a number slightly less than the
state baseline but still too high, Carey said.
“In this town, that seems very, very low,” she said.
Educators saw some hopeful signs in the number of children who
reported what Bogart called “resiliency,” signs pointing to positive
growth that can lower the chances that students will exhibit risky
behavior. In all four questions relating to resiliency, having good
relationships with teachers, having high expectations from teachers,
meaningful participation at school and feeling connected with the
campus, the district’s students surpassed the state’s baseline
scores.
“The news is actually quite good when you look at the positive
ratings,” McGough said. “But then you want to look at what you can do
better.”
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