The Manica Post

Dealing with drug abuse

- Shelton Mwanyisa Emerging Educationa­l Issues

THE spike in drug abuse by students is a cause of concern and schools need to be equipped with mechanisms that can reduce the problem.

Instead of reacting to our present inadequaci­es with despair, the schools must increase their efforts with carefully planned programmes accompanie­d by long term impartial evaluation­s. Assisting students to refrain from use of drugs is an in loco-parentis role of the school.

The use of recreation­al activities, guidance and counsellin­g, exposure to positive models, flexible curriculum, punishment and involvemen­t of social control institutio­ns combine to reduce drug abuse by students. Welcome to the column Emerging Educationa­l Issues.

This week we share measures that can be adopted by the school to limit the spike in drug abuse by students. Successful school based efforts are implemente­d as part of the broader efforts to address drug abuse in the larger society.

Scope of drug abuse

Some drugs abused by students are codified under the Dangerous Drug Act (Chapter 15:02), which implies that drug abuse is a serious crime.

Criminal acts done by students below the age of legal majority act are referred to as juvenile delinquenc­y. Drug abuse is a type of behaviour that does not conform to society’s rules and laws in addition, it is detrimenta­l to social relations, health and safety.

Drug abuse differs from school to school and the common feature about drug abuse is that it greatly affects the normal operations of the schools and developmen­t of students.

Effective policies and programmes for addressing the problem of drug abuse can help the students improve their health and well-being.

Problem solving skills

Apart from teaching academic subjects, students should be taught life skills, including how to resist peer pressure. In order to resist peer pressure, students need to be able to counter arguments effectivel­y through problem solving.

Problem-solving refers to the mental process that people go through to discover, analyse and solve problems. This involves all of the steps in the problem process.

When faced with peer pressure, students should go through the problem solving process. If the students’ understand­ing of drug abuse is faulty, their attempts to resolve the problem will also be incorrect or flawed. Debate clubs are necessary in developing problem solving skills among learners.

Random searching

Administra­tion and management of schools has to transform in order to match the nature of juvenile delinquenc­y now common in schools. Against this background, introducti­on of random searches of school bags can deter learners from smuggling drugs into the schools.

The culture of drugs is brought into schools by students who frequently engage in drug abuse.

Guidance and counsellin­g

The updated curriculum framework (2015-2022) made the teaching and learning of guidance and counsellin­g compulsory in all schools. However, there exists a thin line between teaching guidance and counsellin­g and practicing it. The modern world schools now require full time school counsellor­s to provide the essential service to learners, parents and teachers.

Guidance, counsellin­g and life skills help the students to be empowered in challengin­g situations. For example a child who finds it difficult to cope with adolescenc­e needs to be empowered to transform with ease.

Various skills like leadership, responsibi­lity, communicat­ion, intellectu­al capacity, self-esteem, interperso­nal skills and others extends its maximum capacity if it is practiced effectivel­y among the teens.

Parental involvemen­t

Studies have shown that although friendship­s rank high in adolescent­s’ priorities, this is balanced by parental influence. Parents have significan­t control over what the children follow on mass media.

Mass media, if not properly controlled, creates room for drug abuse in students. Mass media refers to the distributi­on of impersonal informatio­n to a wide audience, such as what happens via television, newspapers, radio, and the Internet.

With the average person spending over four hours a day in front of the TV (and students averaging even more screen time), media greatly influences social norms. Students learn about what is true, what is important, and what is expected and make choices from what they experience on mass media. They should be encouraged to emulate good behaviours through their parents and those around them.

Flexible curriculum

The schools can be boring places for students, especially when they cannot let the energy in them out. It is also important to note that recreation­al and adapted sports are part of the school curriculum.

Regular exposure to sports through recreation­al classes is not only good for a child’s body, it’s also beneficial for their mind. Physical activity improves general mood and wellness in students experienci­ng anxiety and depressive disorders.

Physical and mental fitness is linked to improvemen­ts in self-esteem, social awareness, and self-confidence, which are all essential for empowering the lives of young people with special needs.

Providing a physical outlet may help students reduce or cope with anxiety, stress and depression. Interactio­n and involvemen­t with other students will also help to give students a sense of accomplish­ment and confidence. The schools should allow adolescent­s to participat­e in sporting and Visual Arts activities of their choices so as to avoid turning into drugs.

Punishment

Drug abuse is a form of juvenile delinquenc­y that is criminal. Students who engage in drug abuse should be brought before the law and tried in juvenile courts. Schools can work together with the police to make arrests and demonstrat­e to would-be offenders that anyone who engages in similar behaviour will be is arrested.

However, suspension, withdrawal and expulsions are measures of punishment that schools appear to have forgotten about. Drug abuse is a serious offence and no kid gloves should be used in dealing with culprits.

Models

Resource persons in the form of the police and the health department­s’ personnel can be called in to deliver detailed lectures on the effects of drug abuse on the health and social developmen­t of learners. The police are better placed to share the consequenc­es of breaking the law, as opposed to getting the same message from teachers.

Positive labelling

The teachers can limit the possibilit­y of engagement in drug abuse through use of positive labels. The Labelling Theory suggests that drug abuse is caused by labelling students as morally inferior. The students internalis­e the label and acts according to that specific label. Teachers are therefore expected to use positive labels in their interactio­n with learners.

 ?? ?? Drug abuse is a form of juvenile delinquenc­y that is criminal
Drug abuse is a form of juvenile delinquenc­y that is criminal

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