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Save The
Child/Save The Teenager specializes in
Native ways of preventing school violence and youth drug use. Indians can identify with
the training and curriculum provided
because it portrays Native life both on and off the reservations.
It is the only Native
violence and drug prevention training program in the world that provides
on-site training for Native schools, board members, parents, and students.
All training material is designed specifically for Native people - not
"adapted" from non-native programs.
The Director of the "Native Ways to
Prevention" program, Vicente de la Garza holds an MS and MPH (Master in
Public Health). With 20 years experience in medical and alcohol/drug
treatment programs, he is experienced in all phases of substance abuse and
treatment prevention.
Mr. de la Garza began his career as a medical
care administrator and a health care scientist. He became challenged to take his
medical research skills into education, and has applied those skills to
curriculum development for the Indian education and multi-cultural divisions of
the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory (NWREL). Subsequently, he
established a comprehensive alcohol program in Nome, Alaska. Mr. de la Garza
also established a Denver-based practice for chemically addicted physicians and
commercial airline pilots. In Portland, Oregon, he conducted research on
methadone treatment for heroin addicts.
Following extensive research into Native
substance abuse and violence, Mr. de la Garza, supported by other Native
professionals, developed and field implemented his Indian drug prevention
curriculum which has evolved into a new and successful approach that directly
incorporates Native value systems and motivational triggers. Thus became the
"Native Ways to Prevention" program and its complement, "Save the Child/Save
the Teenager™" program, both of which are being implemented in multiple Native
communities across the United States and Canada.
Mr. de la Garza has a trained and seasoned
staff of professionals to support this cause and your needs.
Please call him at 1-800-458-8071 and he will personally work with you to
develop a training schedule and curriculum that will make a difference in your
community.
Our Primary Goal
Our primary goal is to stop the tragic loss
of Indian/First Nation lives to alcohol and other drugs. We specialize
in on-site and regional training sessions for schools with large Native
student populations.
Comprehensive, we provide Native based
training for:
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Entire communities - Violence and
Drug Prevention - The Indian Way.
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School staff - teachers, aides, bus
drivers, administrators.
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Capitalizing on Native learning
strengths for quick improvements in reading, math and science.
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Redirecting student misbehaviors from
substance abusing environments.
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Drug-Free Student team training -
students in grades 4-12 trained to be drug/violence prevention role
models. Only youth can change youths' attitudes about drugs.
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Parent Training - Intensive 2 1/2 day
training on repairing the fractures in traditional parenting skills that
occurred from Residential Schools and elderly deaths from small pox and
other infectious diseases.
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Smart-Words Program - An
innovative and guaranteed effective way of improving the vocabulary,
reading, academic interest and attendance of Native students.
We are Preventionists
We believe that the answer in Indian
Country lies in preventing children from starting. Therefore, we focus
on helping schools and communities prevent children from all drug/chemical
experimentation.
While we advocate continued support for
existing youth treatment, our goal is to increase the attention and
resources given to preventing children from ever starting.
Remember, Indian people are not
doomed to addiction. We only need to change to Prevention - Native
Ways.
Vicente de la
Garza, “V”
The Director of Save
the Child/Save the Teenager, Vicente de la Garza holds an MA and a MPH
(Master in Public Health).
He began his career as
a medical care administrator, then epidemiologist (health care scientist).
His path included establishing a comprehensive alcohol program in Nome,
Alaska, followed by a Denver specialty practice for chemically addicted
physicians and commercial airline pilots. In Portland, Oregon, he
next carried out research on methadone treatment for heroin addicts.
Mr. de la Garza then
became challenged to take his medical research skills into education.
These skills were applied to curriculum development for the multicultural
divisions of the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory (NWREL), an
education think tank and materials development agency.
Terry Abel
M.A.,
experienced High School Principal, Strategic Planning Facilitator and
Teacher Trainer.
Richard Mitchell
M.S. Safety Systems
Specialist.
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