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Youth often face the challenge of standing up to peer pressure and deciding not to use alcohol. The following resources will help young people take a stand against underage alcohol use and discover fun, alcohol-free ways to spend their time.

A Guide to Safe & Sober Event Planning 
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
A Guide to Safe and Sober Event Planning will help you show all of your friends that drinking alcohol isn’t necessary to have an amazing party. In addition to spreading the word against underage drinking and helping to save lives, you’ll be throwing great parties all year long.

The Cool Spot 
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
The Cool Spot's content is drawn from research-based alcohol prevention curriculum for students in grades 6 - 8. The site includes the key elements of effective prevention programs: norms perception correction, facts about alcohol misuse, challenges to positive expectations, and information about peer pressure and resistance skills. The Cool Spot adapts this content in an engaging, interactive format featuring vivid graphics and characters drawn in the 'anime' style of Japanese comics. It focus tested very well in its intended audience of 11-13 year olds, who particularly appreciated the peer pressure and resistance skills sections. The site includes an interactive, 10-question assessment that educators can use to determine whether students have gleaned some of the site's key learning objectives.

Tips For Teens: The Truth About Alcohol 
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention
This brochure provides facts and dispels myths about alcohol use. Information is provided on long-term and short-term effects, physical and psychological risks, impact on sexual performance, and legal implications.

Too Smart To Start 
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
Too Smart To Start is a public education initiative that provides research-based strategies and materials to professionals and volunteers at the community level to help them conduct an underage alcohol use prevention program. The materials are designed to educate 9- to 13-year-olds about the harms of alcohol use and to support parents and caregivers as they participate in their children's activities.

Too Smart To Start

Too Smart To Start Alcohol Crossword Puzzle 
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
This interactive crossword puzzle is a fun tool to gauge how much students know about alcohol.

Too Smart To Start Alcohol Crossword Puzzle # 2 
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
This interactive crossword puzzle is a fun tool to gauge how much students know about alcohol.

Too Smart to Start Interactive Body 
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
This online quiz shows students how alcohol affects the body.

Too Smart to Start Interactive Body

Too Smart To Start: When Someone Uses Alcohol, It Can Make Them... PDF Icon
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
This word find puzzle is a fun activity to help educate students about the effects of alcohol.

Underage Drinking Prevention Poster 
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
The selections in this colorful poster’s vending machine represent the many activities kids can choose to do instead of drinking. Aimed at middle-school underage drinking programs, the poster directs students to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism/Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s adolescent underage drinking prevention Web site at www.thecoolspot.gov.

Underage Drinking Prevention Poster

Underage Drinking: Myths vs. Facts PDF Icon
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
This brochure dispels common myths about underage alcohol use and helps 9- to 15-year-olds understand the dangers associated with using alcohol.

Underage Drinking: Myths vs. Facts



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Web site jointly supported by the following agencies:

 
U.S. Department of Defense
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense
U.S. Department of Education
Office of Safe and Drug Free Schools
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Administration for Children and Families
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Office of the Surgeon General
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
U.S. Department of Labor
Working Partners for an Alcohol- and Drug-Free Workplace Program
U.S. Department of Transportation
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
U.S. Department of Treasury
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau
Office of National Drug Control Policy
Federal Trade Commission
Last Reviewed on 7/8/2010