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NCADD News Release
For More Information, Contact:
Jeffrey Hon, Director for Public Information
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For Immediate Release:
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Storytelling and Youth Intervention Programs Win
1997 Prevention & Education Awards
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A storytelling program that reconnects young adolescents
with the cultural and spiritual traditions of the Tohono O'odham
Nation, a native American tribe, and a community-wide effort to
give young alcohol offenders a second chance are the 1997 winners
of prevention and education awards given by the National Council
on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc. (NCADD). The awards will
be presented on October 17 during the annual conference of Affiliates
in Detroit.
NCADD's Tucson Affiliate, the Tucson Council on Alcoholism
and Drug Dependence will receive a Meritorious Award for "Cultural Enhancement Through Storytelling." The program, which targets nine- to 14-year-olds in a rural public school district on the Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation, employs asset-building to reduce use of alcohol and other drugs among these youth.
"This program capitalizes on a strong native tradition, an
engaging learning device and a means of effective communication,"
commented David C. Rohlfing, a member of NCADD's Board of Directors
and chair of the Prevention and Education Awards Program Committee.
"In an era where scientific analysis is usually done electronically
and therefore begins a slow fade in importance to many human beings,
the renewal of building common understanding and an effective value
structure by sharing experiences and stories creates renewal for
cultures and a sense of belonging for the individual."
Guiding the project is the philosophy that stories teach
respect for the self, school, teachers, community, family and
tribe, and that the O'odham way, taught through stories, can
strengthen and empower youth. The stories, which include heros
and heroines who face tests, overcome adversity and win honor for
themselves, family and community, help build a strong personal
identity which can motivate youth toward future goals. The stories
also use culturally relevant psychology to influence value systems.
All that the project represents can be found in the saying "O'odham
Himdag `o wud t-gewkdag," which translates as "the O'odham way of
life is our strength."
NCADD's Grand Island Affiliate, the Central Nebraska Council
on Alcoholism (CNCA) will receive a Commendation for its "Minor-in-Possession Diversion Program," which uses education to intervene in the lives of youth who are arrested for possessing alcohol for the first time.
The program relies on the collaboration of the police, county
attorney, high schools and agencies offering counseling services.
By agreeing to undergo an assessment by an addictions professional and
following the recommended course of action, which usually consists of
eight hours of special instruction by the staff of CNCA, kids can avoid
going to jail and keep a clean record.
Statistics offer compelling evidence of this approach over a
"one-size-fits-all" punishment: only 5% of the individuals who
completed the program during the 1996 fiscal year committed an
additional offense compared to 24% of those offenders who chose not
to participate and plead their case before a judge.
The NCADD Prevention and Education Awards Program began in
1977 and now is judged by a panel of NCADD Affiliate executive
directors. All NCADD Affiliates are eligible to apply; entries are
judged according to background and significance; goals and objectives;
activities and approaches; program management; coordination; ease of
replication; and evaluation.
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
provides education, information, help and hope in the fight against
the chronic and often fatal disease of alcoholism, and other drug
addictions. Founded in 1944, NCADD, with its nationwide network of
Affiliates, advocates prevention, intervention and treatment and is
committed to ridding the disease of its stigma and its sufferers from
their denial and shame.
10/7/97
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National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
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244 East 58th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10022
phone: 212/269-7797 fax: 212/269-7510
email: national@ncadd.org http://www.ncadd.org
HOPE LINE: 800/NCA-CALL (24-hour Affiliate referral)
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