5TH GRADERS AT TAMAQUA, WEST PENN AND ST. JEROME ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS PARTICIPATE IN D.A.R.E. CHALLENGE

DARE Challenge, 2-4 PM, Elementary School, Tamaqua, 3-7-2015 (35)Fifth-grade students from Tamaqua, West Penn and St. Jerome elementary schools took part in the 21st annual D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) Challenge on Saturday (March 7, 2015) in the gym at the Tamaqua Area Elementary School.
The event was divided into two 2-hour sessions. The first group attending the 10 AM to 12 PM challenge. The second group attending the 2 PM to 4 PM challenge.
(Page down further to view photos and videos from both events).
During the D.A.R.E. Challenge, students were grouped according to classroom teacher and competed against each other during various physical and mental challenges developed to show them that they don’t need drugs to have fun.
Serving as DARE officers and coaches were West Penn Township Police Officer Jason Lorah and Tamaqua Police Officers Dwayne Hacker and Mike Hobbs, who motivated the children during the program.
Some of the challenges consisted of finding worms in pudding (called Feeding Time), egg toss, painting with a pig snout and filling buckets of water while wearing firefighter’s gear. The grand finale involved an obstacle course, in which each student had to walk with shoe boxes on his or her feet, climb through boxes, avoid water bottle ambushes, slide on carpet, find pennies in green slime, jump rope and hula hoop.
Between each physical event officers asked each team some questions related to drug, alcohol, tobacco, gangs and violence. After each challenge, a few students were picked to participate in the D.A.R.E. Wall.
The wall consists of 10 surprise doors, which almost always resulted with a pie in the face.
The event was sponsored by the Tamaqua D.A.R.E. committee. Committee members point out that the D.A.R.E. program teaches students important things, as well as builds a connection and bond that the students develop with police officers and law enforcement.
“The constant close interaction and motivation promotes trust and comfort toward the officers,” said 22-year volunteer Lisa Shilko.
Committee members expressed their appreciation to the participating students, parents, police officers, school staff, as well as the many sponsors, businesses and organizations that routinely help provide supplies, volunteers and needed funds.
Organizers talked about the loss of state funds for the D.A.R.E. program, pointing out that the survival of the program depends solely on fundraisers and caring sponsors.


Pictured below are a video and some photos from the 10 AM to 12 PM event.
(Page down further to view photos and video from the 2 PM to 4 PM event.)

 


Pictured below are a video and some photos from the 2 PM to 4 PM event.

 

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