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Problematic Prospects for Prevention in the Classroom: Should Alcohol Education Programs Be Expected To Reduce Drinking by Youth?

NCJ Number
113177
Journal
Journal of Studies on Alcohol Volume: 49 Issue: 1 Pages: 51-61
Author(s)
A L Mauss; R H Hopkins; R A Weisheit; K A Kearney
Date Published
1988
Length
11 pages
Annotation
Junior and senior high-school students completed a questionnaire, either once or twice (in successive years), providing measures of variable in three principal sets: (1) curricular variables, those typically addressed on contemporary alcohol education programs (knowledge about alcohol, attitudes toward alcohol, decisionmaking skills, and self-esteem); (2) drinking behavior; and (3) noncurricular variables (demographic and social-psychological traits that typically characterize students before they are exposed to alcohol education programs).
Abstract
Bivariate analyses suggested that the curricular variables are related to drinking behavior, whereas multivariate analyses indicated that these same variables contribute little to the explanation of adolescent drinking when adjusted for the noncurricular variables, most of which are logically and/or chronologically prior to curriculum exposure. It is concluded that contemporary alcohol education programs do address variables that, when considered alone, appear to be related to drinking. However, these same variables make such a small independent contribution to drinking behavior that it is unlikely even a highly successful classroom intervention directed at these variables would do much to prevent alcohol use or abuse by youth. (Publisher abstract)