I do think speaker programs, like your police officer, internet safety speaker, etc., bring in parents. There are so many demands on their time that I think creating social occasions for them to attend doesn't work anymore--too much competition. But they will attend forums that address their worries and concerns. I'm reading a new book called Preventing Addiction: What Parents Must Know to Immunize Their Kids Agains Drug and Alcohol Addiction, by John C. Fleming, a family practitioner. Every once in a while he'll slip in a Christian reference, but mostly it is excellent objective advice based on studies and his experiences as a family doctor, and encouragement for changing the way we think about and address the drug problems and how vital it is to do so at a young age. He is on the speaker circuit. As are the Mother and Son team who wrote from Binge to Blackout. I know my friend's high school in the Chicago suburbs had them come for a lunchtime presentation that was super well-attended.
That's another tack by the way, to do lunchtime activities to draw in parents.
The gist of Fleming's book is that although addiction is rarely diagnosed until one is an adult, for the overwhelming majority of addicts, they began down the road as children. Fleming makes it more understandable how the young brain is affected by chemicals, how the "communication" between neurotransmitters and synapses is interrupted and so on. Yikes! I recommend the book to all middle school and high school parents. The days when we could afford to accept that all kids "experiment" are coming to an end if we choose to actually address the magnitude of the problem of drugs in schools, which affect the ability of our children to be educated as well as their brain development.
OK, off my soapbox. I do appreciate the people who volunteer to try to contribute to the school environmjent through PTO activities. And fundraising for school projects is also important. But it is not THE most important thing and I'm afraid schools are not putting as many of their resources as they could toward drug prevention. Oops, got back on the soapbox.
Mother Warrior,
Mother Warriors