The Jones Center for Families and Teen
LIFE programs are happy to offer the SADD program initiative
to the youth in Northwest Arkansas. Through a grant
sponsored by the Allstate Foundation, SADD at the Jones
Center is able to reach out to the Springdale schools
and the community to encourage positive change in young
people.
| The SADD Mission Statement |
| “To provide students with the best prevention
and intervention tools possible to deal with the
issues of underage drinking, other drug use, impaired
driving and other destructive decisions.” |
The History of SADD
For 25 years, SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions)
has been committed to empowering young people to lead
education and prevention initiatives in their schools
and communities. Founded as Students Against Driving
Drunk in 1981 in Wayland, Massachusetts, SADD has grown
to become the nation’s dominant peer-to-peer youth
education and prevention organization with thousands
of chapters in middle schools, high schools and colleges.
In 1997, in response to requests from SADD students
themselves, SADD expanded its mission and name and now
sponsors chapters called Students Against Destructive
Decisions. SADD continues to endorse a firm "No
Use" message related to use of alcohol and other
drugs. With its expanded focus, SADD now highlights
prevention of all destructive behaviors and attitudes
that are harmful to young people, including underage
drinking, substance abuse, impaired driving, violence,
and suicide.
| Calendario Nacional del SADD |
| Revise el calendario nacional haga
clic aquí. |
SADD’s unique approach involves young people
delivering education and prevention messages to their
peers through school- and community-wide activities
and campaigns responsive to the needs of their particular
locations. Projects may include peer-led classes and
theme-focused forums, teen workshops, conferences and
rallies, prevention education and leadership training,
awareness-raising activities and legislative work. Independent
studies have shown that students in schools with an
established SADD chapter are more aware of and informed
about the risks of underage drinking, other drug use,
and impaired driving. Students in schools and communities
with a SADD chapter are also more likely to hold attitudes
reflecting positive reasons not to use alcohol.
The SADD “NO USE POLICY”
SADD does not support or condone the use of alcohol
by underage young people. The purchase and public possession
of alcoholic beverages by anyone under the age of 21
is illegal in all 50 states.
Alcohol alters an individual's vision, reaction times,
perception of distance, and judgment of one's abilities.
For adolescents, whose brains are still developing in
critical ways, alcohol use makes them more vulnerable
to learning and memory impairments. The use of alcohol
is frequently coupled with risky and potentially destructive
behaviors such as physical and emotional violence, rude
or thoughtless remarks or actions, sexual mistakes or
misjudgments, sexual assaults, and suicide acts and
attempts.
SADD believes that young people can have fun, enjoy
life and nurture positive personal relationships without
the distraction and distortion of alcohol. SADD seeks
to demonstrate positive and attractive alternatives
to alcohol and other drug-infused activities for teenagers.
SADD does not believe that it is possible to break the
law responsibly. SADD and its chapters do not support
or condone activities that encourage or enable the use
of alcohol by underage young people, including the following
activities:
Designated Driver programs for underage young people
Safe Rides programs
Parties where alcohol is served under the supervision
of or with the knowledge or consent of parents or other
adults
Drinking subject to passing a Breathalyzer test
SADD is an inclusive, not an exclusive, organization.
SADD recognizes that the pressures on young people to
drink, use illicit drugs and engage in other unhealthy
behaviors are strong. SADD seeks not to punish or alienate
those students who make unfortunate choices but rather
aims to inform, educate, support and empower young people
to make positive decisions in their lives.
The Philosophy of SADD
SADD was founded on the simple philosophy that young
people, empowered to help each other, are the most effective
force in prevention. For two decades, SADD has been
recognized as a national leader in alcohol and drug
education and prevention. What began as a small town
“grass roots” response to the tragedy of
two teenage deaths quickly grew to become a nation-wide
organization fueled by millions of young people across
the country and around the world. Since the founding
of SADD, teenage deaths due to drinking and driving
have decreased by 60 percent. “Contract for Life”
and “friends don’t let friends drive drunk”
are now part of the teenage vernacular. At the same
time, the world of teenagers has become more complex
and substance abuse, violence, AIDS, and suicide compound
the threat of drinking and driving. With its shift in
focus to include other destructive decisions, SADD remains
the premier youth-based education and prevention organization
in America and maintains the ability to play a leading
role in effective evidence-based prevention programming.
The Value of SADD
- Information Dissemination and Access to
Local Communities
With thousands of chapters nationwide and a strong
network of state coordinators and school-based advisors,
SADD is uniquely positioned to help young people with
the growing threats to their health, happiness and
safety. Through their campaigns and activities, SADD
chapters influence millions of people in schools,
families, local community organizations, businesses,
law enforcement agencies and the media. As an active,
established youth program, SADD reaches into more
schools and touches more young people for longer periods
of time than any other program.
- Integration of Prevention Principles
In this era of science-based prevention and increased
accountability, SADD is committed to strengthening
and documenting the effectiveness of its activities
and programming. Its strong name recognition and expansive
chapter base puts SADD at an unparalleled advantage
to take a leadership role in implementing model prevention
practices within local communities across the country.
Much of the research literature available on effective
prevention programming details a framework of science-based
principles that SADD embraces. One of the foremost
principles of prevention consistently cited is positive
youth development. Positive youth development is the
very essence of SADD. Through SADD membership, youth
of all ages and backgrounds become skilled, educated
agents for youth initiatives developed by local, state
and national organizations working to promote youth
safety and health. SADD students are valued as contributing
members of their communities. Using the array of resources
available in their cities and states, SADD members
seek out and connect their school communities to information,
ideas, educational materials and funding, training
and program opportunities.
SADD contains elements of scientifically grounded
prevention principles recognized and endorsed by NIDA
(National Institute for Drug Abuse), CSAP (Center
for Substance Abuse Prevention), CAPT (Center for
the Application of Prevention Technologies), and NIMH
(National Institute of Mental Health). As a youth
prevention program that begins with and evolves from
local level efforts, SADD is:
- Age appropriate. SADD is tailored for the cognitive
and emotional proclivities associated with the
age ranges of the student populations served.
- Culturally appropriate. SADD offers all youth
the opportunity to get involved and lead prevention
initiatives in their individual communities. With
guidance from the adult advisor and assessment
tools provided from SADD National, SADD students
determine program needs for their communities
and implement strategies that mirror the cultural
values of the target youth population in their
localities.
- Long-term. SADD is available for students through
the school career, starting from 6th grade and
continuing through college. SADD reaches into
more schools and touches more young people for
longer periods of time than any other program.
- Cost effective. SADD is free to all those who
want to join. Fundraising, grants and donations
pay for all programming.
- Strong in dissemination capability. With thousands
of chapters nationwide, SADD is able to reach
millions of youth across the country with prevention
messages and programming. The activities of SADD
chapters impact school populations, parents, local
community organizations, businesses, law enforcement
agencies and the media.
An important element in prevention theory is how risk
and resiliency factors unify the description of community
need and predict a framework for programming. [1]
According to the research, prevention programs must
be designed to enhance resiliency and protective factors
and move toward reversing or reducing known risk factors.[2]
SADD applies this prevention knowledge through its
implementation design and strategies. Specifically,
the SADD model and programming responds to the following
documented risk factors:[3]
- Community-Based Risk Factors
- Lack of opportunities for youth to become involved
with the community
- Easy availability of alcohol, tobacco, and other
drugs
- Community attitudes, practices, policies, or
laws favoring substance use and misuse
- Individual–Based Risk Factors
- First use of any substance during early teen
years
- Greater influence by and reliance on peers rather
than on parents for advice and guidance
- Friends who use alcohol, tobacco, and other
drugs
- School-Based Risk Factors
- School policies, rules, and regulations not
defined or enforced uniformly
- Transitions between schools (e.g., from elementary
school to middle school or from middle school
to high school)
- Family-Based Risk Factors
- Family history of alcoholism
- Parents involving youth in the parents’
use or misuse of alcohol, tobacco and/or other
drugs; e.g., “light my cigarette”;
“get me a beer”
- Unclear expectations of behavior, lack of monitoring
and supervision, inconsistent or harsh discipline,
lack of bonding and caring, and conflict between
parents/caregivers
- Encouraging or ignoring teen use of alcohol
and other drugs
- Parent/caregiver’s use/abuse of alcohol,
tobacco, or other drugs
Concurrently, SADD tailors prevention efforts to foster
youth resiliency by:
- Targeting all forms of drug use
- Promoting skills to resist drug offers
- Building social competency skills
- Promoting normative education designed to correct
students’ misperceptions about their peers’
drug use
- Including a strong parent component
- Reaching out to all diverse populations including
children with behavior problems or learning disabilities
- Providing interactive methods, such as peer discussion
groups
Launching youth media campaigns and lobbying for policy
changes
Expansion and Collaboration of Services
Active and vibrant SADD chapters spawn other chapters,
increasing exposure of young people across the country
to SADD’s youth development initiatives and positive
norms. Studies have shown that schools with an active
SADD chapter have a student body more aware of and informed
about the risks of underage drinking, drug use and impaired
driving.[4]
Often, SADD chapters join other youth campaigns promoted
by various youth organizations and governing agencies.
Many SADD chapters have helped to establish trans-disciplinary,
multi-systemic coalitions in their communities that
utilize the resources of their local law enforcement
agencies, departments of public health, community mental
health centers, school systems, parent communities,
businesses and other active youth agencies.
Summary
SADD chapters serve as a direct link to the heart of
a school system and community. Using students themselves
as primary agents and meaningful contributors, SADD
chapters have become an efficient and effective avenue
for quality programming to be implemented in thousands
of schools and communities across the country. The SADD
National Office supports its chapters and is taking
a lead in developing programming grounded in the most
up-to-date concepts, information and strategies from
research and practice. Ultimately, SADD has the potential
to lead the youth culture into a new era where young
people passionately embrace their ability and desire
to nurture and protect their minds, bodies, spirits
and futures. |