REMARKER
the e
Thursday, April 14, 2022 • St. Mark’s School of Texas • Dallas, TX • Volume 68, Issue 7
UKRAINE | The fate of Europe
PUTIN’S WAR Tales from those affected. See coverage, pages 4, 5.
ILLUSTRATION Jonathan Yin
Nationally-renowned speaker Travia gives students presentation on alcohol use; replaces FCD group by Nikhil Dattatreya he Counseling Office invited known speaker on alcohol use Ryan Travia to speak to students about alcohol addiction April 4. The invitation followed its decision to cut ties with Freedom from Chemical Dependency (FCD), a nonprofit organization that formerly educated students on campus about drug addiction. Director of Counseling Dr. Gabby Reed explained the change came after a noticeable decline in program and content quality over the past year. “When COVID hit, we didn’t have the option to do FCD for that year,” Reed said. “When we were back in school, we had them do virtual assemblies, but we weren’t
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super impressed with the content.” Reed decided to talk with counselors from other schools to assess their situation, finding that the impetus to find new speakers allowed her to adjust the current health and wellness curriculum. “I reached out to some of the directors of psychological services at other schools, and they had similar feedback about the FCD programming that year in particular,” Reed said. “We couldn’t really guarantee the quality of the program, so we thought this was an opportunity to find other outlets for drug and alcohol use prevention.” Although Travia is the first in a future series of speakers, he represents a small
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part of the updated addiction curriculum. “Ryan is just one small part of what we’re trying to do around alcohol and drug prevention,” Reed said. “But my vision for alcohol and drug prevention and addiction education for the future is comprehensive,” she added. “It involves working it into science classrooms, learning about the chemistry of addiction, working it into health and wellness. We want to build all of that into the curriculum, so it’s not just one threeday event once a year.” As for how they chose Travia, Reed says Upper School Head Colin Igoe first noticed him when Travia spoke at another school. “Igoe has worked at a couple of schools
11timothy hicks Remembering the school’s talented and devoted band director.
14trans alumnus Hear from Olive Maurstad, who was known as Aidan while a student here.
before, and Ryan has actually spoken at both of those schools,” Reed said. “Igoe felt like he was amazing, and his message was incredible. He talks about the brain science behind alcohol, and our guys always enjoy the science side of these things.” Reed says she wants to provide different perspectives on substance abuse so students can more easily relate to each individual speaker. “We want to come at this from a couple different angles,” Reed said. “One is the personal angle, and the other is the scientific angle. It’s important to hear both because one will resonate with some, and one will resonate with others.”
24trip neil ‘03 An alum makes his mark on the national deaf soccer team.