The Every
15 Minutes Web site says: "Life's lessons are best learned
through experience. Unfortunately, when the target audience is teens and
the topic is drinking and driving, experience is not the teacher of
choice."
During May 20-21, 2009 the Every 15 Minutes Program was presented to the
students of Dexter Regional High School.
This event was coordinated by the Tiger
Wellness Team and Dexter Key
Club, and involved the local police departments, sheriff's office,
emergency medical services, fire departments, civic organizations, and
school personnel. Here is the description of the program from the Every
15 Minutes web site:
The Every
15 Minutes Program offers real-life experience without the real-life
risks. This emotionally charged program, entitled Every 15 Minutes, is
an event designed to dramatically instill teenagers with the potentially
dangerous consequences of drinking alcohol. This powerful program will
challenge students to think about drinking, personal safety, and the
responsibility of making mature decisions when lives are involved.
During the first day events the "Grim Reaper" calls students who have
been selected from a cross-section of the entire student body out of
class. One student is removed from class every 15 minutes. A police
officer will immediately enter the classroom to read an obituary which
has been written by the "dead" student's parent(s) - explaining the
circumstances of their classmate's demise and the contributions the
student has made to the school and the community. A few minutes later,
the student will return to class as the "living dead," complete with
white face make-up, a coroner's tag, and a black Every 15 Minutes
T-shirt. From that point on "victims" will not speak or interact with
other students for the remainder of the school day. Simultaneously,
uniformed officers will make mock death notifications to the parents of
these children at their home, place of employment or business.
After lunch, a simulated traffic collision will be viewable on the
school grounds. Rescue workers will treat injured student participants.
These students will experience first hand, the sensations of being
involved in a tragic, alcohol-related collision. The coroner will handle
fatalities on the scene, while the injured students will be extricated
by the jaws-of-life manned by Fire-Fighters and Paramedics. Police
Officers will investigate, arrest, and book the student "drunk driver".
Student participants will continue their experience by an actual trip to
the morgue, the hospital emergency room, and to the police department
jail for the purpose of being booked for "drunk driving".
At the end of the day, those students who participated in the staged
accident as well as those who were made-up as the "living dead" will be
transported to a local hotel for an overnight student retreat. The
retreat will simulate the separation from friends and family. A support
staff of counselors and police officers will facilitate the retreat.
During the most powerful program of the retreat, the students will be
taken through an audio - visualization of their own death. Then each
student will write a letter to his or her parents starting out with . .
.
"Dear Mom and Dad, every fifteen minutes someone in the United States
dies from an alcohol related traffic collision, and today I died. I
never had the chance to tell you......."
Parents will also be asked to write similar letters to their children.
These letters will be shared the following day when students and parents
will be reunited at a school assembly.
On the following morning, a mock funeral service will be held at the
High School. Speakers will include students who will read letters to
their parents. Parents will share their personal reflections of their
involvement in this program. We will also have a powerful speaker who
actually lost a child to a drunk driver.
The focus of the assembly stresses that the decision to consume alcohol
can affect many more people than just the one who drinks. This very
emotional and heart-wrenching event will illustrate to students, the
potentially dangerous consequences of their use of alcohol, regardless
of how casual they believe their use may be.
Here are
some pictures from the two days.
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