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Swanson, Jon Colby – Journal of Drug Education, 1974
Student perceptions of teacher qualities show significant differences between those teachers trained by values clarification techniques and those trained by traditional techniques. Courses taught by these teachers were also perceived differently by students who took them. A combination of lecture-discussion methods and values clarification…
Descriptors: Drug Education, Junior High School Students, Student Attitudes, Teacher Effectiveness
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Chng, Chwee Lye – Journal of Drug Education, 1980
Values clarification is widely used in drug education programs. Criticisms are offered on the role of content in valuing, the position of ethical relativism, the danger of indoctrination, and the social pressure to conform. (Author)
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Drug Education, Drug Use, Ethical Instruction
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Toohey, Jack V.; And Others – Journal of Drug Education, 1981
Describes a Spanish language drug and substance abuse education program including development of a student activity book and instructor's manual and a usability evaluation. Traditional value gaming strategies were used. A pilot study in Mexico showed Spanish speaking agencies could use the program conducted by their own staff. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Drug Education, Feasibility Studies, Foreign Countries
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Smith, Bryan C. – Journal of Drug Education, 1973
The purpose of this study was to measure the relative effectiveness of two methods of teaching drug education to preservice elementary school teachers. The methods compared were the traditional teacher confined approach, and the value clarification group-centered process. The latter approach was found to be superior in all ways measured. (Author)
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Cognitive Tests, Comparative Analysis, Drug Education
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Robinson, James, III – Journal of Drug Education, 1981
Studied the effects of implicit instruction, explicit instruction, and values clarification instruction. All treatment groups reported significantly higher knowledge scores than did the control group, but only the explicit instruction treatment was able to produce any changes in attitudes or behavior. (Author)
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Behavior Patterns, College Students, Comparative Testing