Drug use down in one district, survey says
Andrew Edwards
Substance abuse in the Huntington Beach City School District is
declining, according to a survey of seventh-graders taken last
spring.
The California Healthy Kids Survey measured rates of drug, alcohol
and tobacco use. It also gathered information on campus safety and
whether students participated in healthful activities such as regular
exercise.
Answers from 627 district seventh-graders were included in the
confidential survey. Participation was voluntary and students needed
their parents’ permission to respond.
Some district officials described the survey results as
encouraging, but educators remain concerned about substance abuse
among students.
“Any significant use of alcohol, tobacco, drugs, all of these
things are unfortunate,†said Bill Wallace, a member of the
district’s board of trustees.
At a board meeting on Tuesday night, Wallace said he was alarmed
by figures showing that 13% of district seventh-graders had consumed
alcohol in the 20 days before they took the survey.
“In a certain sense, that’s almost shocking,†he said.
However, reported rates of alcohol use were down from two years
ago. In 2001, 15% of students answering the survey said they had
recently used alcohol.
The rate of seventh-graders who admitted to using alcohol at any
point in their lives was also down, from 28% in 2001 to 20% last
year. Reported tobacco use also fell, but by only one percentage
point, with 6% of seventh-graders having admitted to trying
cigarettes. The rate of marijuana use remained steady at 8%,
according to the survey.
The rate of students who admitted to using inhalants, commonly
known as “sniffing†or “huffing,†rose. In 2001, 7% of students
reported trying inhalants compared to 9% in 2003.
More students responding to the survey last spring reported
feeling safe on campus. In 2003, 91% of seventh-graders said they
thought their campus was safe, up from 87% two years ago.
Though official comparison data from schools across the state are
not yet available, district Assistant Supt. Lynn Bogart said she
believed substance abuse in the district is average for California.
“I really don’t know if that’s good or bad. None of us like to be
average in Huntington Beach,†she said.
Compared to other districts in Orange County, Bogart said she
thought her district’s students did well.
“We have larger percentages of students who resist high-risk
behavior,†she said.
The district plans to conduct the survey again this spring, and
intends to include fifth-graders to comply with mandates laid out by
federal No Child Left Behind legislation.
The results of the survey are a reminder that educators cannot
ignore dangers facing children in schools, board member Shirley Carey
said.
“All of us can’t put our heads in the sand,†she said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers education and crime. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7177, (949) 494-4321 or [email protected].
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