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'College Drinking: Reframing a Social Problem'

February 26, 2009

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Every semester of every academic year, college campuses experience tragedies (and many more near-tragedies) involving excessive use of alcohol. A new book -- College Drinking: Reframing a Social Problem (Praeger) -- argues that colleges may need to rethink the approaches they have been taking to the problem. The author is George W. Dowdall, professor of sociology at Saint Joseph's University, in Philadelphia. Dowdall recently responded to questions about his book.

Q: You note that drinking among college students hasn't increased dramatically, but public discussion/concern has. Why is there so much attention now?

A: College drinking, once viewed as a harmless rite of passage, was reframed as the number one public health problem for students. Research projects such as the Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study (with four surveys from 1993 to 2001 directed by Henry Wechsler) provided abundant evidence that heavy episodic or binge drinking raised the risk of alcohol-related problems for the individual drinker. The national data showed that although a majority of college students drank moderately if at all, 44 percent binged, and therefore ran higher risks. At about a third of colleges, more than half of their students engaged in binge drinking. The same studies demonstrated “second hand effects” on those in the immediate environment. Other data sources tended to show similar results.

A series of widely reported drinking deaths at prominent institutions like MIT raised even more attention. A 2002 Task Force on College Drinking by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) estimated that from 1,400 to 1,700 students died annually from drinking-related problems. Most recently, a group of college presidents has argued for lowering the drinking age, claiming (with no new evidence) that covert binge drinking has increased substantially. Over the past few decades, coverage of the issue of college drinking increased significantly in the national and higher education press as well as in campus newspapers.

Q: What is the link between drinking and crime on campus?

A: In our society, there is a powerful correlation between alcohol and crime, so it’s not at all surprising to find the same pattern between alcohol and campus crime. Excessive college drinking is associated with considerable activity by campus and community police, dealing with fights and with arrests and disciplinary actions associated with underage drinking. Rape demonstrates this alcohol-crime connection clearly. A large national study I coauthored reported that one out of every 20 college women experienced nonconsensual sex since the beginning of a school year, according to questions asked in spring semester surveys (roughly a period of seven months). More than 70 per cent of those women were too intoxicated to give consent, meeting the legal definition of rape.

There is another connection as well. I report in my book on the rape of a student at a small suburban liberal arts college. The man who raped her claimed he was drinking heavily at the time of the incident. He later used this story in successfully appealing an academic suspension, with the institution allowing him to attend classes and complete his degree but banning him from other campus activities. Alcohol ends up being an excuse for all sorts of problems.

Q: What are the lessons from the Duke lacrosse case for those concerned about drinking culture on campus?

A: The Duke lacrosse rape case was a “false positive.” No rape occurred, and a rogue prosecutor fabricated a case against innocent students. But the huge publicity about the allegations called attention to a culture of heavy alcohol use among some students on the Duke campus. Only a minority of students appear to be part of this culture, but many were tarred by the same brush in the media accounts. The Duke case also illustrates the potential “soft costs” associated with college drinking -- a major research university was painted in a very negative light by a case with international press coverage.

Q: The former president of Middlebury College has organized a group of college presidents to argue for change in the 21-year-old drinking age. What do you think of this movement?

A: I’m impressed with the ability of the Amethyst Initiative to bring attention to the issue of underage drinking. But the initiative set a low threshold, asking presidents to endorse a public debate about the policy and not an actual lowering of the drinking age, so at least some presidents probably signed on hoping just for more discussion. While it’s true that over 100 presidents endorsed the initiative that of course means the vast majority of college presidents haven’t.

I’m concerned that the movement places too much emphasis on the minimum drinking age, one factor among many shaping college drinking. Its proponents ignore research that shows that the current minimum drinking age has saved hundreds of lives each year, even with only modest efforts to enforce the law. I find it hard to believe that responsible college presidents can discount creditable research showing hundreds of lives saved. The initiative fails to explain how making many high school seniors into legal purchasers of alcohol wouldn’t simply push the problem down into younger high school populations. This doesn’t sound like “choosing responsibility” to me, but more like passing the buck.

So far, the movement has largely ignored successful efforts to moderate the negative effects of college drinking. Just claiming that the drinking age doesn’t work seems irresponsible in the face of extensive evidence to the contrary. It’s striking that a diverse set of organizations -- MADD, traffic safety experts, the AMA -- have sharply opposed the movement’s attempt to roll back the minimum drinking age.

Those college leaders who are failing to deal successfully with their own students’ alcohol abuse shouldn’t end up advocating changing a law that affects all those 18-21, including the majority not in college. Colleges should be leading the effort to scale down underage drinking, not undermining community and state efforts to enforce a law with widespread public support.

Q: What are the major mistakes colleges are making when it comes to curbing dangerous use of alcohol?

A: Colleges sometimes pigeonhole the dangerous use of alcohol as purely a student affairs issue or a problem for a small number of individual students. They simply don’t frame it as a major college-wide problem.

When alcohol-related problems happen, like a student death, colleges sometimes would rather “dodge a bullet” by trying to tamp down media coverage instead of viewing the incident as a teachable moment.

It’s difficult for many of us to look at alcohol realistically. After all, it’s not a controlled substance, is it? I asked my own students to rank-order in terms of potential harm some widely used illicit substances along with alcohol and tobacco. Most put the last two “legal” substances toward the end of the list, even though experts rank them significantly higher. We need to educate ourselves and our students about the risk of harm from what amounts to what writers have called our “domesticated drug” or “drug of the quad.”

Colleges should examine closely the evidence-based conclusions provided by the NIAAA in its 2002 College Drinking Task Force report and its recent update “What Colleges Need to Know Now.” Purely informational approaches used alone simply don’t work. Trying to deal with college drinking as only an individual’s choice doesn’t work either. Instead, colleges should try to shape the entire environment that shapes college drinking.

Q: What are some of the more promising strategies more colleges should consider?

A: The most important task of colleges is to place this issue much higher on their own agendas. Colleges ought to look critically and realistically at what they now do; assess, using fresh research, what effect they’re having; and engage in serious strategic planning about what to do next. Just pulling a promising program or today’s trendy intervention off the shelf and directing it at a small fraction of students probably won’t work too well.

Fortunately, promising approaches and resources are available, and I discuss many of them in my book. The NIAAA College Task Force concluded that several strategies have been demonstrated to work with the individual drinker and with general populations. The former include motivational interviewing for individual students. Among the latter, better enforcement of the minimum drinking age laws would help. One study completed after the NIAAA Task Force ended its work found that those states with more effective enforcement of those laws had lower rates of college binge drinking. Another promising strategy is to build effective campus-community coalitions. Colleges should be at the forefront of efforts to get the individual states to enforce existing law better.

Colleges should make use of the information and consultation services provided by the Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Violence Prevention, funded by the U.S. Department of Education. The center holds a comprehensive annual meeting and offers considerable experience to campuses seeking assistance in dealing with problems.

Finally, presidential leadership (both at individual colleges and in national higher education) is necessary to focus attention on college drinking and raise it higher on college and higher education agendas. The associations that make up the Washington Higher Education Secretariat should take a fresh look at this issue and not just let a few such as NASPA and NCAA do all the heavy lifting. College drinking is a problem for all of higher education.

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Comments on 'College Drinking: Reframing a Social Problem'

  • college drinking
  • Posted by chavez on February 26, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • "a major research university was painted in a very negative light"

    If Duke university ended up in a negative light as a result of the lacrosse case, then it has only itself to blame. Not only did it abandon its wrongfully-accused students, its President and other public spokespeople seemed to confess at every possible opportunity that the university was indeed a bastion of racism and sexism.

    I'm sure that pleased some of the more radical faculty; but imagine if Duke's President had echoed the words of Donna Shalala at the Univ. of Miami:

    "But we will not throw any student under the bus for instant restoration of our image or our reputation. I will not hang them in a public square. I will not eliminate their participation at the university. . . .

    "It's time for the feeding frenzy to stop. These young men made a stupid, terrible, horrible mistake and they are being punished. They are students, and we are an educational institution and we will act like an educational institution, not like a PR machine trying to spin and restore an image that we worked so hard to put in place."
    Apparently no one at Duke (a "major research institution") understands the science behind DNA, or that three men cannot struggle with and gang rape a woman in a confined space and not leave a single cell behind. (Or maybe the radical agendas promoted by the faculty were just too important for innocence to be allowed as a defense in this case.)

    In either instance, Duke's reputation rises or falls by its own action; it was given a test and it failed woefully in the morality and courage departments.


  • drinking and the like
  • Posted by j ranelli on February 26, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • there was, once upon a time, at a prestigious research university, a perpetual bridge game corner in the student union

    which, at first glance an observer might take for a healthy diversion from the grind of rigorous, it was a long time ago),

    study, but, upon a closer look, turned out to be a theatre-of-the-absurd processing station for students in academic or

    personal difficulty whose downward spiral was measured by the amount of time given to the game.

     

    those who joined the game either played for a period of days or weeks, perhaps between or after classes, then

    "got it together" and left, or stayed at the table for longer hours, playing from mid-morning until late-night with some breaks for an occasional class, a date

    or a meal, prior to their disappearance.

     

    a dean of students or one of the cadre of associates, parked across the room, could not have asked for a more

    vivid schematic of troubled kids, masking their own depression or disfunction behind the social pain-killler of the bridge

    game's welcoming and approval.

     

    with drinking it's the same or similar...and as with the bridge game there is no one

    on duty.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    onnn

  • Nanny State and 1984
  • Posted by Libertarian on February 27, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • Do we have to problematize every lapse of judgment, and sometimes even criminalize minor annoyances? It's a slippery slope to an Orwellian society, all in the name of "protection."

  • The Upside of Growing Old
  • Posted by Rod Bell , Adjunct Professor/Political Science at College of DuPage on February 27, 2009 at 12:15pm EST
  • We of a certain age were spared these fun-killing principals and their hall monitors who now track high-school graduates onto their college campuses, into their dorms and frat houses, determined to do their part in liquidating the social and intellectual rites of passage that once led us across the line between supervised children and unsupervised adults-in-waiting.

  • 1,700 deaths per year is not trivial
  • Posted by Craig Brandon , Editor at Party Schools Exposed blog on February 27, 2009 at 8:30pm EST
  • According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, 1,700 people are killed each year by drunken college students. Many of these victims are students who drink themselves into unconsciousnes or fall down stairs. Most college professors are not aware of the problem because it doesn't happen in the classroom. But ask students about the vomit-filled bathrooms and the unconscious students they have to step over to get out of the dormitory. Ask about the rapes and assaults that are a direct result. The idea that an 18-year-old is mature enough to make choices is very outdated. These are children who are out of reach of their parents and act irresponsibly while running up huge tuition bills.

    Anyone who wants to know more about this problem should take a look at my blog: Party Schools Exposed and click on the Binge Drinking button.

  • Dowdall Interview
  • Posted by Dan Romer on February 28, 2009 at 9:00pm EST
  • I sympathize with Patrick Dowdall and his concerns about college student binge drinking.  I share those concerns.  However, the fact that it persists despite the 21 drinking law suggests that the law does not work.  Most successful efforts to reduce binge drinking in college students involve greater parental involvement and other educational interventions.  From this perspective, the law actually gets in the way.  Colleges cannot train responsible drinking when it is illegal for many of their students to engage in it all. Alcohol is a problem for anyone, no matter what age, when it is abused. Postponing the opportunity to model and encourage appropriate drinking behavior is not a solution. 

  • How Can You Teach Good Behavior, When That Behavior is Banned?
  • Posted by Mark , President at GreatCollegeAdvice.com on March 1, 2009 at 8:45pm EST
  • I agree with Mr. Bell that college students are essentially "children" that need "supervision." They need to be taught how to handle alcohol (an otherwise legal substance) responsibly. They do not, however, merit punishment that the drinking laws require. (Or perhaps Mr. Bell is also an advocate of trying all juvenile criminals in adult courts--in which case, he would be expressing consistent views).

    My view is that college administrators cannot supervise something that, by law, cannot or should not be taking place. Yet drinking on campus does occur on almost every campus. Since colleges cannot supervise, they end up nodding and winking to the practice, as long as they do not see it out in the open (the equivalent of "don't ask, don't tell"), and the practice goes underground.

    I think the Amethyst Initiative makes sense within the context of residential colleges. Of course the research may suggest that nationwide deaths of 18-21 year-olds has declined since the drinking age was lowered. But what seems to work in one context may not work in another.

    Since the law is one-size-fits-all, residential colleges have little option to really bring the problem into the open and teach their students how to be responsible drinkers. Because how on earth can we teach responsible drinking when the law says students cannot and should be allowed to drink, period?

    Colleges are hamstrung, it seems to me.

  • Enforcement
  • Posted by DFS on March 2, 2009 at 11:45am EST
  • If laws were actually enforced, instead of pleaded away, the necessary examples would be met.

    In my wild college days, I and my classmates knew that we were responsible and therefore were accountable.

    On another note, if 18-year-olds are still to regarded as "juveniles," then why are parents of 16-year-olds told to back off when their daughter becomes pregnant and wants an abortion; why is the US government allowed to come and pick up people for military service; and why should a "juvenile" be allowed to vote?

  • Need Rules
  • Posted by Stopthehate on March 9, 2009 at 5:15pm EDT
  • To Libertarian who thinks we are criminalizing minor annoyances: The brain doesn't fully develop until the 20s, so is a damaged brain a minor annoyance? Libertarians don't like regulations - how's that peanut butter taste?