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Health Quests
Overview
In this activity, groups of students visit sites on the World
Wide Web that provide text and visual information about the
dangers associated with the use of tobacco, alcohol, and other
drugs. Using this informatioas well as that found at
a site devoted to Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) basicsstudents
create a Tobacco, Alcohol, and Drug Awareness page to be added
to the school Web site. If your school does not have such
a site, students may share their findings either in an in-class
multimedia presentation or as a schoolwide public service
announcement.
Objectives
- To learn through images and text found
on the World Wide Web about the health risks associated
with the use of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs, especially
among teens.
- To share information on these health
risks with other teens through a student-designed Web page
or multimedia presentation.
Getting Started
Introduce the activity by clipping colorful ads for alcohol
products from magazines and placing these along a chalk rail
in the classroom. Invite students to browse through the "gallery"
you have created. Ask them to describe the images and text
used by the advertisers and to identify what messages the
advertisers are attempting to communicate to the public. Discuss
with students the realities of alcohol use and the health
risks and problems it causes. Ask: Is alcohol the only substance
that can impair a person's judgment or lead to tragic results?
Elicit that drugs and tobacco also fit this description. Point
out that alcohol and nicotine--the addictive substance contained
in tobacco products--are themselves drugs.
Classroom Follow-up
If the classroom computer is hooked up to a school network,
encourage students to advertise the presence of their Web
page. As an alternative to the project, or if the school has
no dedicated Web site, you may ask groups to create a multimedia
presentation of information they have gathered. Students may
alternately work together to write a public service announcement,
which may then be broadcast over the school public address
system.
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