Monday, February 10, 2020

E-CIGARETTES AND TEENS



E-cigarettes have become a major health problem for school-aged youth.  The Curriculum Infusion of Real Life Issues (CIRLI) educational strategy developed at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago prepares K-12 teachers to integrate prevention of e-cigarette use into classes across grade levels and subject areas.  Students can be effectively engaged in learning by study of this life issue that affects their daily lives.

The Problem
In 2019 more than 27 percent of high school students used e-cigarettes, a sharp increase from 20.8 percent in 2018.  1.6 million school-aged youth used e-cigarettes regularly (on more than 20 occasions per month).   Juul, the major company providing vaping products in the United States targeted sales to youth by producing e-cigarettes with a variety of attractive flavors.  While e-cigarettes have been marketed as a safe alternative to cigarettes, they are in fact very harmful.
CIRLI prepares k-12 teachers across grade levels and subject areas to integrate into their classes study of e-cigarette use or other real life issues their students face.  Evidence-based prevention strategies are incorporated into the life issues curriculum. 
·      In language arts classes students can read, write and speak about use of e-cigarettes
·      In math classes students can work with data on the numbers of e-cigarette users and the damage e-cigarettes do
·      In social studies classes students can study how the e-cigarette industry has targeted young people; they can compare marketing of e-cigarettes to past marketing of tobacco and alcohol targeting youth
·      In science classes students can study the physiological effects of e-cigarette use

Through CIRLI teachers learn evidence-based prevention strategies that can be readily incorporated into classes.   These include:
·      Engaging students in community-based prevention, including e-cigarette prevention campaigns in the school community  
·      Increasing perceptions of the personal risk of use of e-cigarette
·      Building student concern for the harm e-cigarettes can do to others
·      Building student decision making capacity, including the capacity to resist peer pressure

The CIRLI curriculum is always consistent with class learning objectives.   Assignments are designed to build student skills in research,  analysis and communication, helping students reach Common Core State Standards. 

For questions  contact 
Dr. Ron Glick, Professor Emeritus and Director of the Network for Dissemination of 
Curriculum Infusion (NDCI) at NEIU. 

You can find information about the Curriculum Infusion of Real Life Issues 

educational strategy on the NDCI website—www.cirli.org.