Campanie contacted area school advisors and
recruited two or three students from each of five schools:
Hamilton, Oneida, Morrisville, Chittenango and Cazenovia.
She says the program was open to any student who had interest
in the issue and that "many stepped up and said they wanted to
be involved."
One of the students, 17year-old Amanda Lafrance of
Chittenango, says "when approached about the project, it kind of
hit me that they are right about all the different
advertisements, kids are constantly talking about getting drunk,
and you see all these accidents on the news." She feels, "it
would be nice to make some changes."
Campanie says the students will be going out into the
community looking for alcohol advertisements that "target youth
and promote underage drinking." They will be also be looking at
product placement.
The students began by attending a media literacy training
program, which Lafrance says, "taught us how to interpret
commercials and different advertisements."
Since taking the class, the students have been on their own
conducting research. Lafrance says her group has been visiting
local stores and taking photos of alcohol placement. She says
that many stores stack beer next to soda displays or in the
middle of aisles near cookies. She notes soda and cookies are
items popular with younger kids.
Lafrance conducted an experiment in which her 10-year-old
sister, Jamie Leigh Tedford, purchased an alcohol-related
T-shirt that stated on the tag that only someone over 21 should
purchase the item. Jamie Leigh easily purchased the shirt.
The group will attempt this experiment again later in their
project, siting that, it may have been a one time oversight.
Lafrance says they are also researching television
commercials that may appeal to a younger audience. She gave the
example of the Bacardi rum advertisements with rocket ships and
the Corona beer spots with a parrot. She says, "younger kids are
attracted to bright colors," such as the parrot in the Corona
commercials.
Once school starts, Lafrance's group will conduct a student
survey to discover how students got introduced to alcohol. The
survey will also try to determine whether their perceptions of
advertisements had anything to do with wanting to drink.
"We hope that eventually, out of their assessments, the
students will go back to their stores or teen hangouts and try
to change some of the things that bothered them," adds Campanie.
The end result will be videos put together by each group,
which will then be presented in Albany to legislators. The
students will also present their findings at school board
meetings and in other community forums.
BRiDGES is paying for the project with a grant through OASAS,
the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse
Services, under the goal of Environmental Prevention Strategies.