Indiana SADD is here to help in any way possible! If you have questions about prevention ideas or plans you are making for the future, contact us! We may be able to help! For example, if your students would be interested in performing Celebrate Life (script in left column), we can help prepare them for the event. Also, if you are planning a mock car crash, feel free to use the script provided to the left, making any changes necessary. We also can help the day of the mock crash, providing some equipment, a narrator and other resources. Call or email today with questions or ideas of how we can help you!
Aside from the annual Quick-Click Challenge held at the Indiana SADD/ Orange Ribbon Celebration, many schools hold Quick-Click Challenges at their schools. This may be an event open to students during a lunch hour, an event at Open House, or an activity for your chapter. Many schools hold a local Quick-Click Challeng before attending the Celebration to select a team to compete. To view the Quick-Click Challenge rules, download the PDF file at left. Schools are welcome to use this activity for any prevention purposes that will be beneficial to the community.
Indiana SADD offers Buckle Up signs to schools as an awareness tool to educate their peers on the importance of buckling up. The 12"x18" metal signs are just one more resource for SADD chapters to impact their community. Order your signs today!
Fatal Vision Obstacle Course
Indiana SADD will visit your school in the SADD Mobile, followed by a trailer pulling a golf cart. An obstacle course will be set up for students to drive through on the golf cart, wearing fatal vision goggles simulating different levels of BAC (blood alcohol concentration). The goal of this program is to physically demonstrate to students how serious driving under the influence is and how drinking even less than the legal limit of .08 can affect your judgment. Students and adults will experience the lack of control after consuming alcohol first hand, and hopefully make responsible choices accordingly in the future.
Indiana SADD brings Dance Dance Revolution and Guitar Hero to middle schools and high schools to promote SADD chapters among their peers and to demonstrate just one of many fun, safe alternatives on the weekends. Provided typically during the lunch hour, this program gives chapters an opportunity to talk openly about SADD and recruit!
The Intoxiclock is a piece of equipment used throughout winter school visitations with the DDR Challenge. The Intoxiclock shows students the length of time it truly takes for someone to recover from the effects of alcohol. It also provides SADD employees the opportunity to talk one on one with students about what is legally considered a drink, the side effects of alcohol on the body, and personal stories of alcohol-related crashes.
Indiana SADD
401 N. Plum Street
Union City, IN 47390
Phone. 765.964.4683
Fax 765.964.7233
James Noffsinger
Indiana SADD
State Coordinator
Jamie Vickery
Program Director
Indiana SADD Programs and Services
Copyright 2005-08 Indiana SADD - All Rights Reserved
Indiana SADD is a resource for SADD Chapters and prevention groups around the state, offering traveling programs free of charge. State Coordinator, Jim Noffsinger, also travels to schools to share his personal story about how he developed such a passion for the cause. If you are interested in Indiana SADD visiting your school, please review the visitation form (left column).
OUTDDOOR PROGRAMS
INDOOR PROGRAMS EXTRAS
With the financial support of State Farm Insurance, Indiana SADD's newest program, the Seat Belt Convincer, is being used all around the state to educate youth and adults on the importance of buckling up. The Convincer allows participants to experience the actual force of a 5-7mph crash and the value of the restraint provided by a seat belt.
NOTE: A completed release is required for anyone taking part in the Convincer program.
An indoor version of the Fatal Vision Obstacle Course, the "Cruisin' Cooler" is a motorized device used to allow students to experience the effects of visual impairment while driving. A gymnasium is the ideal setting for this event, providing space for the activity, as well as room for students to gather and watch.