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College presidents must
take action to change the culture of drinking on campus, said Presidents
Institute panelist Susan Resneck Pierce, president of University
of Puget Sound (WA), during a session on the president’s
role in addressing campus drinking.
More
college students are drinking to get drunk and engaging in risky behavior
(for example, driving under the influence and having unprotected sex),
she said, noting that “1,400 college students die each year because
of alcohol, 500,000 are injured, 600,000 are assaulted, and 70,000
are victims of date rape or sexual assault.” Pierce cited a recent
report from the National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse
Task Force (NIAAA), A Call to Action: Changing the Culture of Drinking
at U.S. Colleges. Pierce served on the NIAAA’s Task Force on College
Drinking.
Given
the magnitude of the problem, she said it is important for college
presidents to tackle the issue. She suggested a number of actions
presidents could take that might have a positive impact on campus
drinking:
- Work with students
on an individual level;
- Make substance abuse
prevention a priority;
- Educate faculty members
about how alcohol abuse leads to academic problems (25 percent of
students report having academic problems related to alcohol abuse)
and persuade faculty members to join in efforts to address the problem;
- Step up the enforcement
of the minimum drinking age law;
- Work with off-campus
bars and nightclubs on responsible serving;
- Educate students about
alcohol poisoning;
- Create alcohol-free
living spaces and host alcohol-free events;
- Eliminate keg parties
on campus, and eliminate alcohol at sporting events, including banning
tail-gate parties; and
- Conduct a social norms
campaign to educate students that there is actually less drinking
than they think there is; students tend to want to conform, and
if they think more students are drinking, they might feel more pressure
to do so themselves.
Following
her stint on the Alcohol Abuse Task Force, Pierce undertook a major
alcohol awareness campaign at the University of Puget Sound. She said
the institution now “rents security personnel/police on the weekends
to patrol the off-campus neighborhoods, which has significantly improved
the campus’ relations with the neighbors; notifies parents of students
with major or chronic offenses (which has led to very few repeat offenders);
has adults living in all of the residence halls; sponsors a lot of
midnight breakfasts with live music; schedules a variety of orientation
activities on alcohol abuse and alcohol policies on campus; and disallows
alcohol-related advertising on campus.
She
encouraged presidents to obtain the college materials kit from the
NIAAA, which contains a copy of every publication released by the
Task Force on College Drinking. The kit can be ordered online at www.collegedrinkingprevention.gov.
Independent
The Council of Independent Colleges
One Dupont Circle NW, Suite 320 • Washington, DC 20036
tel: (202) 466-7230 • Fax: (202) 466-7238 • e-mail: mailto:cic@cicnche.edu • www.cic.edu
Last updated: March 2003
Copyright © 2003 The Council of Independent Colleges |