(a) In order for the schools to become healthy learning environments and to provide a strong defense against drug use and violence, the State Board of Education shall prescribe programs within the existing health and physical education program which teach resistance and life skills to counteract societal and peer pressure to use drugs, alcohol, and tobacco, and shall include counselors, teachers, and staff in full implementation of the program. The board shall also prescribe programs to coordinate violence reduction efforts in schools and between schools and their communities and to train students, teachers, counselors, and staff in conflict resolution skills. The program shall be comprehensive, interdisciplinary, and shall begin in elementary school.
(b) No later than the start of the 2018-2019 school year, a county board shall implement comprehensive drug awareness and prevention programs for students in grades K through 12 to receive instruction regarding the dangers of substance abuse. The purpose of the drug awareness and prevention program is to:
(1) Keep students from illegally using alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs;
(2) Reduce or eliminate the incidence and prevalence of students alcohol, tobacco, and other drug abuse;
(3) Reduce the factors that place students at risk of abusing alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs through school and a community-based planning processes;
(4) Contribute to the development of school environments and alternative activities that are alcohol, tobacco, and drug-free;
(5) Increase the knowledge and skills of students, staff, and community members for avoiding the harmful effects of alcohol, tobacco, and drug use, and of blood borne pathogens;
(6) Actively involve staff, students, parents, and community members in the development and implementation of the drug awareness and prevention program plans;
(7) Facilitate an understanding and appreciation of the risks to, duties of, and likely actions by law-enforcement officers when conducting investigations; and
(8) Instruct how to respond to an officer during a vehicular or other stop or police interaction, including problematic or dangerous action and behaviors that could result in a person being detained or arrested.
(c) The county board shall coordinate the delivery of instruction to meet the purposes of subsection (b) of this section with educators, drug rehabilitation specialists, and law-enforcement agencies to periodically provide age appropriate student education on their experiences with the impacts of illegal alcohol and drug use.
(d) Beginning with the 2018-2019 school year, instruction required pursuant to 18-2-9 of this code in the subject of health education in any of the grades six through 12 as considered appropriate by the county board shall include at least 60 minutes of instruction for each student on the dangers of opioid use, the additive characteristics of opioids, and safer alternatives to treat pain.
(e) Beginning with the 2020-2021 school year, comprehensive drug awareness and prevention programs for students in grades K through 12 may include faith-based electives, along with nonfaith-based electives, for drug awareness in classrooms. The state board shall promulgate a rule on how the faith-based electives can be offered in a way that is consistent with constitutional requirements.
Structure West Virginia Code
Article 2. State Board of Education
§18-2-1. Creation; Composition; Appointment, Qualifications, Terms and Removal of Members; Offices
§18-2-3. Meetings; Compensation and Expenses of Members
§18-2-4. Organization; Appointment, Compensation and Duties of Secretary
§18-2-5a. Board Rules to Be Filed With Legislature
§18-2-5b. Medicaid-Eligible Children; School Health Services Advisory Committee
§18-2-5d. Duty of Board to Report Guidelines for Productive and Safe Schools
§18-2-5e. Higher Education Participation in Development and Use of Public Education Assessments
§18-2-5f. Use of Student Social Security Numbers
§18-2-5h. Student Data Accessibility, Transparency and Accountability Act
§18-2-6a. Sale of Healthy Beverages and Soft Drinks in Schools
§18-2-7. Courses of Study; Language of Instruction
§18-2-7a. Legislative Findings; Required Physical Education; Program in Physical Fitness
§18-2-7b. Programs in Drug Prevention and Violence Reduction
§18-2-7c. Program in Personal Finance
§18-2-7d. Program in Workforce Preparedness
§18-2-7f. Alternative Educational Opportunities for Elective Course Credit
§18-2-8. Course of Study in Fire Prevention
§18-2-8a. Hunter Safety Orientation Program
§18-2-8b. West Virginia Remembers Program; Rulemaking
§18-2-9. Required Courses of Instruction
§18-2-9a. Elective Courses of Instruction on the Bible
§18-2-10. Certificates and Awards
§18-2-11. Sabbatical Leaves for Teachers and Certain Aides
§18-2-12. Computer Science Courses of Instruction; Learning Standards; State Board Plan Development
§18-2-13. Character Education Integration
§18-2-13a. Control of Property and Business Affairs of State Educational Institutions
§18-2-13c. Payroll Deductions for Employees' Participation in Group Insurance Plans
§18-2-13d. Marshall University
§18-2-13e. Transfer of Property for the Use of Marshall University
§18-2-25b. Emergency Action Plans for Athletics
§18-2-25c. Defibrillator Required at Certain Events
§18-2-26. Abolishment and Transition of Regional Education Service Agencies
§18-2-27. Authority to Contract for Programs, Services and Facilities
§18-2-29. Competitive Grant Program for Selected Schools and School Districts
§18-2-32. Posthumous High School Diplomas
§18-2-33. Rules for Antihazing
§18-2-35. Dress Codes Requiring School Uniforms for Students
§18-2-36. Framework for Initiating Comprehensive Transformation of School Leadership
§18-2-39. College and Career Readiness Initiative
§18-2-40. Suicide Prevention Awareness Training; Dissemination of Information
§18-2-40a. Education on and Prevention of Self-Harm Behavior and Eating Disorders
§18-2-41. Education and Prevention of the Sexual Abuse of Children
§18-2-43. Addressing Disciplinary Action in West Virginia Schools