Describe adolescent drug experimentation. What types of school and community prevention programs are the most effective?

What will be an ideal response?

Most teenagers who dabble in alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana are not headed for a life of addiction. These minimal experimenters are usually psychologically healthy, sociable, curious young people. But adolescent experimentation with any drug should not be taken lightly. Because most drugs impair perception and thought processes, a single heavy dose can lead to permanent injury or death. And a worrisome minority of teenagers move from substance use to abuse—taking drugs regularly, requiring increasing amounts to achieve the same effect, moving on to harder substances, and using enough to interfere with their ability to meet daily responsibilities. Unlike experimenters, drug users are seriously troubled young people.
School and community programs that reduce drug experimentation typically teach skills for resisting peer pressure, emphasize health and safety risks, and get adolescents to commit to not using drugs. But given that adolescent drug taking is widespread, interventions that prevent teenagers from harming themselves and others when they do experiment are essential. Many communities offer weekend on-call transportation services that any young person can contact for a safe ride home, with no questions asked.

Psychology

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Kristy is always nervous whenever she goes on a date. If she wants to use modeling to help her overcome her anxiety, she could:

a. talk to her best friend, who never gets nervous on dates, about how to act b. go to a café and watch how other people who are on dates interact c. imitate how her favorite soap opera character acts on a date d. use any or all of these examples

Psychology

The fact that some reflexes, such as the rooting, sucking, and Palmer grasp, are shared by other primates and seem to have adaptive significance supports the theoretical perspective of

A) progressive education. B) radical behaviorism. C) positive psychology. D) evolutionary psychology.

Psychology