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A guide to how different areas
of campus life can support your activities...
Campus Activities Can...
- Bulletin Boards
and Exhibits
Use a highly traveled area of campus and develop a prevention message
bulletin board on NCAAW topics.
- Freebies and Giveaways
People are your best bulletin boards to make people aware of an issue.
Have people sign a pledge card to make responsible decisions about alcohol,
or sign a pledge to never drive when consuming alcohol, and give them
a ribbon or pin to wear, or pens to use.
- Visual Impact
Events
Candlelight services, community parades, and athletic event half-times
are all highly visible ways to promote prevention messages.
- Fun Events
Sponsor an alcohol-free tailgate, fun run, mix up mocktails at an event,
sponsor an Up All Night party at your recreation center,
declare a natural highs day on campus with fun games or
kite give-aways.
- Lunch Time Programs
Make the most of captive audiences at meal hours by sponsoring educational
trivia contests with prizes. Host brown bag lunches on hot topics like
the drinking age, zero tolerance laws, or fake IDs.
- Use the Campus
Media and Promote Events!
Get your campus newspaper, radio and television stations involved. For
promotion, get Vince & Larry crash dummies to pose for photos and
provide educational literature.
- Show a Film
Films like 28 Days, Traffic, Leaving Las
Vegas, or When a Man Loves a Woman set the scene for
some great discussion. Include student leaders, faculty film buffs,
and prevention people.
Ways Campus Judicial Offices Can...
- Include educational
sanctions and community service in your judicial process. Suggest campus
NCAAW events as opportunities for learning about the effects of alcohol
abuse.
- Give students
real world information. What would happen to them if they were cited
in the community for underage drinking, public intoxication, destruction
of property, physical violence, etc.?
- Construct a display
that talks about community fine amounts and then what students could
purchase instead of paying fines....i.e. 30 compact disks, 60 pizzas,
books for the year, 70 trips to the movies, etc.
- Have students
write articles suitable for publication in the student newspaper on
various student health and campus policy issues.
- Have students
who have been sanctioned assist RAs in the residence halls and learn
what its like to promote a positive living community.
- Work with the
local judge to have students put in hours at the local community courts
when alcohol-related cases are being heard.
- Have students
volunteer in a community service agency that focuses on addiction recovery.
- Have the current
peer education group on campus teach a sanction class on alcohol poisoning,
sexual assault, violence, etc.
- Organize a mock
trial which focuses on alcohol abuse-related issues, i.e. DUI,
alcohol poisoning, assault, etc.
Things Athletes and Recreational Sports Professionals Can Do...
- Use electronic
media (such as scoreboards or marquees) to advertise prevention messages.
Place ads in athletic programs or in the newspaper.
- Make prevention
announcements at sporting events.
- Have athletes
act as prevention mentors at local high or middle schools.
- Place prevention
message on cups and/or napkins at athletic events.
- Have coaches and
athletes make a public service announcement for radio or TV.
- Sponsor a responsible
tailgate party in conjunction with an athletic contest.
- Hang safety and
prevention banners in the gymnasium and at the fields.
- Sponsor or co-sponsor
a fun, visible event in conjunction with NCAAW, such as a fun run or
walk or a tug-o-war.
- Open the fitness
center for longer hours.
- Offer free fitness
demonstrations.
- Do blood pressure
or cholesterol screenings.
- Have a sporting
event marathon (softball, volleyball) to raise awareness and/or money.
- Offer free swing
dancing or ballroom dancing lessons.
- Offer a performance
and alcohol workshop for athletes and those interested in fitness.
- Sell mocktails
at athletic contests to promote NCAAW and to raise funds for other programs.
What Fraternities & Sororities Can Do...
- Sponsor a health
and safety message banner contest between organizations.
- Sponsor a mocktail
contest between groups.
- Host the ideal
party with theme (alcohol free with proceeds going to prevention agencies).
- Have a fraternity
and sorority chapter participate together in a safety workshop using
an interactive program like Alcohol 101.
- Bring together
all groups and sponsor a Day of Dialogue that would involve
many representatives from the campus community and focus on improving
behaviors surrounding misuse of alcohol.
- Place ads in the
newspaper supporting the campus-wide prevention events, or social norms
promoting positive behaviors.
- Have members attend
the campus events.
- Ask an attorney
to run a mock trial for a DUI case using students as the defendants,
witnesses, and jury.
- Have a 5K or 10K
run to raise awareness about student health and/or raise money for a
local prevention agency.
- Volunteer to do
community service projects with local agencies.
Ways Residence Life Staffs Can Be Involved...
- Have your own Cannes
Film Festival. Incorporate some films that address issues surrounding
alcohol abuse or personal safety in the area lounge. Also, consider
using the episode of The Real World when Ruthie was confronted about
alcohol abuse.
- Conduct a progressive
party with each hall responsible for a different food/beverage/dessert
and then have people make the rounds from one hall to the other.
- Invite one of
the campus counselors/members of the health center to be the guest for
the night. Have them give a presentation that evening but then hang
out with students.
- Have a mocktail
contest.
- Do something to
get in shape every day, a fun run on Monday, swimming on Tuesday, aerobics
or weight training on Wednesday, etc.
- Perform peer theatre
or skits on educational topics such as alcohol poisoning or sexual assault,
followed by a discussion.
- Have your own
talk show one night in the lounge, using your own version of Lovelines
to start a discussion on relationships.
- Do your own version
of the life experience wall where you ask people to write
down on index cards how the abuse of alcohol or other drugs has affected
their fife. These cards then make up the bricks of the wall.
- Hand out laminated
saving a life from alcohol poisoning cards to each resident.
- Incorporate alcohol
awareness/prevention into the October in-service training.
Things Campus Police and Safety Can Do for
NCAAW...
- Host a luncheon
for all residence life folks explaining your role in the prevention
process, and form a partnership.
- Invite members
of the community to form a campus safe walk program which provides escorts
at night.
- If acceptable
under campus policy, conduct a controlled drinking experiment
where students of age are given alcohol in a supervised setting. Have
these students conduct simple tasks such as writing their name, walking
a straight line, etc. The point of the program should be you dont
have to drink a lot to be impaired. (off-duty police officers may be
substituted for students) Supervise the program until the drinking
volunteers are sober.
- Conduct a mock
DUI crash which involves staging an accident on campus, local
EMT and police and fire rescue professionals.
- Try to get a local
cab company to offer a discounted price to anyone with a student ID
in order to discourage impaired driving.
- Find out if any
members of your public safety crew have any interesting educational
experiences or interests that could become a campus program This may
include workplace drug testing or Drug Enforcement Agency work etc.
- Do a program about
the legal and financial costs of getting a DUI. Take the total costs
of that arrest and do a what you could have gotten instead of
a DUI campaign including, new stereo, computer, spring break in
Cancun etc.
- Set up roadblocks/safety
checks to check for impaired drivers.
Things Health Education, Health Center &
Counseling Centers Can Do...
- Curriculum Infusion
Contact Journalism and English classes to promote and enter the IATF
Writing Contest addressing high risk drinking. Work with the student
newspaper to feature some of these op-ed pieces in the paper during
NCAAW. Ask marketing and advertising classes to develop campaigns for
healthy choices to be featured in the newspaper. Be creative and get
as many departments on campus to participate as possible.
- Host a meeting
of student organizations and peer educators to get input for each groups
participation in the week.
- Create fact sheets
or offer to provide information for student groups, newspapers, and
radio PSAs for campus events.
- Add alcohol and
other drug questions to your health centers medical history questionnaires
if they do not already appear.
- Work with community
outreach or service learning on your campus to give students an opportunity
to work in area halfway houses for recovering addicts.
- Invite recovering
alumni back to campus as speakers for groups in which they were involved
such as athletic teams, fraternities and sororities, student government,
etc.
- Set up a health
fair to coincide with the week. Offer local and campus resources that
focus on healthy lifestyles.
- Provide an in
service for faculty and staff on how to address students suspected of
having alcohol and other drug problems.
Ideas for Chief Student Affairs Officers to Support
NCAAW...
- Honor student
organizations that promote healthy lifestyles with a letter of recognition,
phone call, E-mail, or sponsor a luncheon.
- Write an article
or letter to the editor of the student newspaper regarding the
importance of the week of awareness and year of action to decrease alcohol-related
problems on campus.
- Encourage staff
and faculty to participate in events of the week. Provide incentives
or
flex time.
- Create a task
force to review policy and make suggestions toward developing a healthier
environment. Include community members and alumni on the committee.
- Meet with Academic
Administrators and ask for help, ideas and support for the NCAAW
on your campus. Encourage curriculum infusion of alcohol-related issues
into each
discipline during the week.
- Provide money
for mini-grants for student organizations to sponsor alcohol-free events.
- Ask Parking Services
to include a Dont drink and drive or Wear your
seat belt
messages to the parking passes issued by the institution.
- Initiate a student
leader town meeting on the issues of alcohol abuse on your campus.
Ask leaders from Peer Education, Greek Community, Academic Honors Groups,
and Athletic
Teams to participate.
- Meet with students
who have been in the judicial system for alcohol-related problems.
Ask for their input and suggestions.
- Meet with local
bar owners to discuss policies and mutual safety issues surrounding
the campus.
Participate in and be visible during NCAAW events.
Include NCAAW as an agenda item for discussion with senior staff
officers and faculty.
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Important peer leaders
- Greek letter organizations, student
governments, student athletes, residence hall associations, and
other
campus programming groups - must take the lead in educating students
about safety and wellness, in encouraging alcohol-free living environments,
and in supporting facilities and programs that encourage healthy
interactions and development of students.
- What Can You Do?
Report from the National Symposium on Alcohol Practices sponsored
by the Inter-Association Task Force on Alcohol and Other Substance
Abuse Issues
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Colleges and universities should enlist the direct
support of their president, who can write persuasively and effectively
to the parents of incoming students and to the faculty stating the
behavioral standards - setting the tone for community life - at
the school. Faculty must be cognizant of being on the front-line.
They are close to the students, influential, and intelligent observers.
A student who needs help, through university or community resources,
may be most obvious to a faculty member first. On a personal level,
students need to hear that they are responsible as individuals,
that they must know their own limit and consider their family history
and genetic and physical makeup in determining whether and how much
to drink. Teaching them how to handle acute intoxication of a classmate
or friend should also be on the agenda.
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Students need to be free from the second-hand effects
of the irresponsible and dangerous behaviors of others: violence,
sexual harassment and assault, unwanted sexual encounters, impaired
driving, and sleep problems.
- What Can You Do?
Report from the National Symposium on Alcohol Practices sponsored
by the Inter-Association Task Force on Alcohol and Other Substance
Abuse Issues
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