Pubdate: Fri, 14 Feb 2005
Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Copyright: 2005 The Sydney Morning Herald
Contact:  http://www.smh.com.au/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441
Author: Kelley Burke, Education Reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

SCHOOL DRUG TESTS A FAILURE: CATHOLIC REPORT

Inflexible and harsh policies on illegal drugs in private schools are just 
shallow marketing ploys, new national research claims.

Schools adopting rigid policies, such as random drug testing, put their 
reputation above students' needs and force drug use underground, the 
national report on drug use and policies in Catholic schools warns. The 
Ignatius Centre, the policy and research arm of Jesuit Social Services, 
will release the report today.

A $20,000 Federal Government grant assisted the research. But in contrast 
with the federal Education Minister, Brendan Nelson, who yesterday 
signalled in-principle support for random drug testing in state schools, 
Keeping Them Connected is scathing of drug testing, describing it as 
nothing more than a "marketing instrument" in the few Catholic schools 
using them.

Dr Nelson told Channel Ten yesterday random drug testing of high school 
students was a "positive initiative" and "plain common sense", if done in 
consultation with parents and students as part of a zero tolerance 
approach. But the report says zero tolerance schools are "more concerned 
with the protection of their own reputation and less concerned with the 
interests of the student body".

And drug use did not seem to diminish in those schools, but was more 
hidden, the report said. The threat of expulsion or transfer meant a school 
became "a no-go zone for seeking help or guidance in this area". The 
report's author, the policy director at Jesuit Social Services, Peter 
Norden, said many Catholic schools had embraced a more honest, caring and 
less confrontational approach to drug use, but a minority still used an 
ineffective and solely disciplinary approach. "Adolescents learn by making 
mistakes and a punitive response doesn't actually lead to change, but 
alienation and disconnection," said Father Norden.

About 600,000 children across Australia attend the 1700 Catholic systemic 
schools, which Catholic education offices control. But the report found 
Catholic independent schools - usually those in competitive markets - were 
more likely to have compulsory expulsion or transfer policies for illicit 
drug use. Moreover, most students surveyed in such schools said illicit 
drug use was a "taboo topic" with their parents.

Lorraine Walker, the co-ordinator of student welfare programs for the NSW 
Catholic Education Commission, said its schools saw no place for illicit 
drugs. But the report showed a flexible, harm-minimisation approach 
grounded in pastoral care was more effective.

The commission's director of policy and programs, Ian Baker, said most 
students were drug free, and Catholic schools, like state schools, 
suspended drug users. But principals needed more discretion within the 
"mandatory sentencing" parameters, he said, particularly after 
distinguishing between one-off experimental and habitual users.
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MAP posted-by: Beth