Drugs and alcohol is a rather important topic to be discussed among high school students. High school is notorious for being a time of experimentation, along with being a time filled with newfound freedom, and along with that comes difficult decisions sometimes. One thing that you can find almost anywhere in high school is peer pressure. Peer pressure can easily make kids succumb to the hopes and wants of others, this is especially true with drugs and alcohol. If you are with a group of friends, and they are doing something, most of the time kids will follow suit, in hopes to not look scared or weak in front of their friends. Many times in high school you will be confronted by difficult situations, however, these situations can be countered with responsible action, and asking yourself …show more content…
The kids using these things are content with how they are, and have no hopes of changing who they are because of the “friends” that they have, and the negative image that would be cast upon them. Even with that said, I think that some kids would be willing to listen, and some of those kids may be those that are unhappy with their habits, and actually looking to make themselves a better individual. The best way to teach students about drugs and alcohol would be to have a limited attendance assembly, with sign up required to attend. The reason for making it limited attendance is that if only kids that want to go, or want to learn are there, it will be much more effective. If kids that could care less about the topic, or those not seeking to change are there, they will disrupt constructive discussion. Along with that, if not everyone is there, people may be more open to talking about things, without being in fear of being judged by their friends, and fellow peers. I feel that this is a hard discussion to have in a
Drugs and alcohol have a negative impact on the lives of college students. Ashley Miller of Demand Media writes that “22 percent of college students admitted to using illicit drugs, and 63.3 percent of college students identified as heavy drinkers” (Miller 1). There are many negative effects involved with using drugs and alcohol in college. Using these substances impacts a student’s performance in class. Students who tend to drink miss their classes because they are either too hungover or because they want to go party. Many students also dying from overdosing. Also alcohol and drugs can hurt your body emotionally and physically. These substances can harm your organs and also damage your brain functions. These substances can also have an effect
Throughout schools in the United States, there is a growing issue in our elementary through highschool aged students. Drugs and alcohol have begun to overtake childrens lives as young as twelve years old. There are many types of drugs involved from prescription drugs, which is the number one drug, to alcohol, marijuana, meth, cocaine, heroine, or inhalents.
These numbers reveal that teenagers face an apparent exposure to drugs, and have little trouble getting a hold of some if desired. This article concludes that drug use and its consequences are not stressed enough in the current high school curriculum. The statistics prove that more needs to be done to identify and educate students at risk for drug use.
Three decades from now, T.L.O., a student at a New Jersey High School was caught smoking in a school restroom, and was brought to the assistant principal’s office. The 14-years-old teenager denied smoking, so the assistant principal persisted in searching her purse and found cigarettes, and rolling paper which is associated with marijuana (T.L.O. vs. New Jersey). Nothing has changed since then. If you look a little closer, you can see teenagers lying around doing drugs here and there. They are no longer determined to succeed in life; instead all they can think about is where the next supply of cocaine will come from. What has our future come to? Research done by scientists and other professionals provide evidence that substance abuse by teenagers is an ever-growing problem due to teen’s poor judgement, it’s irreparable damage, and inability to compete with drug addiction.
A drug is a substance that alters the mind, body or both. Drug use is an increasing problem among teenagers in colleges today. Most drug use begins in the preteen and teenage years, the years most crucial in the maturation process (Shiromoto 5). During these years adolescents are faced with difficult tasks of discovering their self identity, clarifying their sexual roles, assenting independence, learning to cope with authority and searching for goals that would give their lives meaning. Drugs are readily available, adolescents are curious and venerable, and there is peer pressure to experiment, and there is a temptation to escape from conflicts. The use of drugs by teenagers is the result of a combination of factors such as peer
One risk for the cohort of students beginning college is substance abuse. Students think that it is the norm in college, especially a school with a party reputation like Tulane, to go out a lot and have fun. Many students do not know their personal limits, or may surpass their limits in order to abide by the prevalent drinking culture. Tulane has done a great job of educating incoming freshman on the risks of substance abuse and informing them of ways to seek out help. Over the summer, Tulane required freshman to complete an AlcoholWise course which included an anonymous survey of past alcohol experiences so that the course was curbed to each individual. AlcoholWise was also a great way to assess the prevalence of drinking in the freshman
There are problems with alcohol and drug abuse in every high school system. Each school deals and records the problem differently, which is why there is not a similar percentage of use from one school to another. Some schools require students to take health classes, which cover the curriculum of drug effects. Other schools simply try to plead the cases that drugs are not an issue that pertains to academics. Society expresses the impression that alcohol helps to improve and enhance your social life, when in fact it usually has the opposite effect. The link between drug use and not liking school is strong, which is why you would rationalize it as a common factor to academic deficiency. There are currently multiple methods of trying to prevent and to educate drug and alcohol abuse in high school. (National Center 2, 4)
Drug use is an increasing problem among teenagers in today's high schools. Most drug use begins in the teenage years, these years are the most crucial in the maturing process. During these years adolescents are faced with the difficult tasks of discovering their self identity, clarifying their sexual roles, assenting independence, learning to cope with authority figures and searching for goals that would give their lives meaning. Drugs are readily available, adolescents are curious and venerable, and there is peer pressure to experiment, and there is a temptation to escape from conflicts. The use of drugs by teenagers is the result of a combination of factors such as peer pressure, curiosity, and
Has anyone in your family ever die because they couldn’t control their alcohol abuse or they were scared to ask for help ?Alcohol abuse is an important topic because many people die from it everyday. Alcohol abuse plays a major role in high school students because of the things they see their parents do and their peers do Alcohol abuse plays a major role on teens in high school because of things that their parents do in front of them and they catch on and want to be like them.
It has been discovered that most people who struggle with drug addiction began experimenting with drugs in their teens. Teenage drug abuse is one of the largest problems in society today and the problem grows and larger every year. Drugs are a pervasive force in our culture today. To expect kids not to be influenced by the culture of their time is as unrealistic as believing in the tooth fairy (Bauman 140). Teens may feel pressured by their friends to try drugs, they may have easy access to drugs, they may use drugs to rebel against their family or society, or they may take an illegal drug because they are curious about it or the pleasure that it gives them.
Truth magazine stated that 90% of teenageers of teenageers experince peer pressure, and 88% admitted to falling into peer pressure which is agreeing with their friends to try different things. Of course they see many different groups around but simply feel like none of the suit they're personality. Therefore, they are pressured to lead to drugs to have back the feeling of having fun, and seeing everyone enjoying themselves all together.
Every problem has a beginning, where the domino effect starts. In most cases people get started drinking not because they like it, but because it is illegal and it gives them a chance to rebel. The so-called “rebel” becomes bored of drinking alone and eventually seeks “company” when they are drinking. The only catch is that the “rebel” can not be the only one drinking so the “company” has to drink. This is where the problem with peer pressure and teenage drinking begins and the first domino starts the chain reaction. There are two types of peer pressure. There is direct peer pressure where a subject’s peers actually force him into having a drink. There is also indirect peer pressure where the subject enters a setting and his peers are drinking so he decides to have a drink to fit in with the rest of his peers (Articles-Teenage Drinking 2). Surveys show that alcohol abuse is related to teenage activities such as going on dates and going to parties (Teenage Alcohol Misuse 2).
Alcohol has been a part of human society for millennia. It can be found in churches, gas stations, supermarkets, and nearly everywhere else. Drugs are becoming more ubiquitous as well, with the legalization of cannabis now active in some form in 25 states (Maciag “State”). However, no single place is more saturated with alcohol and drugs than the college campus. Despite the troves of research that have been done to give evidence that they are harmful, there is still an overwhelming voice against control of these substances. First-year students are hit the hardest by this influence, being freshly exposed to the freedom of moving away from parents. It is this freshness, combined with the vast availability and marketing of alcohol, that causes college freshmen to be extremely susceptible to its effects. Despite how drugs and alcohol are romanticized in the media and easily available to college students, these substances have a negative effect on sleep habits, attendance, grades, athletic performance, extracurricular participation, and ultimately academic retention, especially among first-year students. Furthermore, the causes and effects of substance use are closely and cyclically related to social pressures brought on by college and its surrounding culture, making a sort of vicious cycle of stress and substance use in many cases.
Male students that consumed alcohol or abused drugs in high school that came to college and became roommates with another male that was similar to them in high school could have negative effects on each other and are probable to increase their consumption into
Drugs between teenagers is one of the most serious problems, because it causes a change in the behavior of any teenager and a physical change too. Most of the teenagers use alcoholic drinks as a way to escape