Best Practice in School Drug Education
Australian Government Commonwealth Monographs
Commonwealth Monographs 1 – 8 (www.dewr.gov.au)
Summary of ‘good
practice’ in school drug education
Research about effective teaching in the area
of drug education has been well documented, particularly since
1990. The following summary provides schools and teachers
with a set of guiding principles for teaching drug education
in an effective and developmentally appropriate way. More
detail is provided in a series of monographs published by
the Australian Government.
- Understanding key terms in drug education
- Creating an engaging curriculum
- Schools can't do it alone
- Safety with a lifeline
- Drugs and a sense of personal responsibility
- Effective communication
- Creating connectedness
- Knowing the scene
1. Understanding
key terms in drug education‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- promotes connectedness
- understands that, in the school environment, such
belonging carries with it clear obligations –
the expectations that are part of any culture
- adopts this integrated and pervading approach so
that students are supported to make good health judgements
and decisions about themselves and others, and to
acquire the skills and capacities that contribute
to resilience and self-worth
- engages students at both the cognitive and the
emotional levels in their learning
- understands that the best way to promote a sense
of self-worth is through keeping each student connected
to school, friends, family and the community.
2. Creating
an engaging curriculum‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- sees opportunities created for drug education to
occur in ways which, to staff, students and families,
look ‘different’
- is less concerned with ‘teaching about drugs’
than it is with creating the circumstances that will
build student engagement and connectedness to a healthy
and positive outlook
- gives prominence to identifying and meeting the
needs of individual students.
3. Schools
can’t do it alone‘: Good practice’ in drug
education
- recognises that drug education requires a united
response from the school, the family and the community
- sees the school giving priority to support
- sees a strong sense among all staff that they are
responsible for the wellbeing of all students
- sees staff-student relationships characterised
by trust and respect
- sees awareness by the school that inappropriate
discipline may serve only to increase the vulnerability
of the student concerned
- recognises the relationship between the school
and the family as a key element to its effectiveness
- facilitates effective and appropriate ongoing communication
between the school and the family regardless of the
issue or the level of family dysfunctionality
- sees that where the student’s family or home
life may increase their vulnerability, the school
works assiduously to support the student and his/her
connection to the school
- sees schools identify and harness available community
resources to support students who are at-risk.
4. Safety
with a lifeline‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- focuses on support rather than sanctions
- views disconnection of the student from the school
as an indication of failure, and suspension is used
as a last resort
- ensures that constructive use of time is on- and
off-site alternative activities, including those conducted
in association with community agencies and the family,
as appropriate
- listens to and reinforces the prevailing voice
of optimism and constructive behaviour
- sees the engagement of the whole school community
in a learning experience that can lead to both understanding
and direction in relation to drug issues
- sees the school’s ethos as one of genuinely
caring for each student within a stable and safe environment.
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5. Drugs and
a sense of personal responsibility‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- recognises and values the school as a ‘community’
- focuses on meeting simultaneously the needs of
the individual student and creating the conditions
and circumstances in which they can positively engage
with others
- harnesses students’ concern for the wellbeing
of friends.
6. Effective
communication‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- is based upon the school mapping and checking regularly
that all stakeholder groups are participants in the
school’s communication channels, and that communication
is leading to shared understandings
- allows school leaders to articulate regularly and
consistently the values and understandings that underpin
the school’s work in drug education
- builds an inclusive culture in which key information
is provided, disparate views are listened to, and
all feel that they will be treated with respect
- conveys the message that school is a safe environment,
and that there are strategies set in place to ensure
this
- binds school communities together so that the school’s
work in drug education forms part of and complements,
a larger community picture of commitment to the wellbeing
of children and young people.
7. Creating
connectedness‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- values and encourages debate and exploration of
new and different ways to maintain student engagement
and continued support for those most at risk
- requires that students’ learning experiences
meet academic needs while also building social competencies
and self-worth
- sees schools seeking to create and sustain student
connectedness to allocate time and resources and to
provide precise, individual feedback to students on
their learning
- accords a student’s connectedness to school
as a high priority.
8. Knowing
the scene‘Good practice’ in drug
education:
- sees schools attaching a high importance to being
well informed about the realities of local drug use
and associated lifestyle issues
- sees schools developing a multifaceted approach
to drug education that targets the differing needs
of all students
- sees schools able to describe all activities relevant
to drug education across the school that are designed
to engage students, keep them connected and develop
capacities for long-term resilience
- sees schools gather data regularly and systematically,
thereby enabling evaluations of contextual information
and drug education activities.
More
Documents (pdf)
Australian Government Principles for School Drug Education
These documents are produced by the Australian Government through the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations. For further information please see www.dewr.gov.au.
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