Pubdate: Wed, 26 Mar 2008 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2008 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 Authors: Farrah Tomazin, With Bridie Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) PRINCIPALS DEEPLY DIVIDED ON MERITS OF TESTING MELBOURNE Grammar headmaster Paul Sheahan knows he's a fairly lonely voice in the debate over drug testing in schools. For the past 10 years, his elite private boys school has tested around 25 students suspected of illicit substance abuse - most of whom tested positive. Mr Sheahan knows it's not a popular measure, but he believes drug testing is for "the greater good". "The idea is one of salvation, rather than damnation," Mr Sheahan said. "We actually have the child's interest at heart. I know it might sound as though we're fairly brutal but we're not. We believe that kids lead much more productive lives without drugs, and if we can help them get on the straight and narrow, that's all for the good." At Melbourne Grammar, the process is simple. If students are reported by their peers to be using drugs, or start displaying "signs" such as erratic behaviour or a sudden decline in academic performance, their parents are given an ultimatum: subject the child to a drug test or remove him from the school. The tests are conducted by an independent consultant. If it comes back negative, "there's no problem", Mr Sheahan said. If it comes back positive, students are counselled by the school and their parents must agree to have their child tested regularly for 12 months in order to remain enrolled. So far, no family has refused to have their child tested, said Mr Sheahan. But what about the potential consequences, some of which were highlighted in today's Australian National Council on Drugs report - which found that drug testing children could lead to stigmatisation, mistrust between students and teachers and embarrassment among their peers? "It's not the best thing to do, but I reckon in some areas of social behaviour within the community, we've gone a bit soft, and I think we worry too much about some possible outcomes that might occur. But the greater good needs to be served in my view," Mr Sheahan said. "Often kids need a reason to be able to say no. Not many kids want to be booted out of school so if this sort of possibility is hanging over their heads, it gives them a good chance to say: 'No, I just can't be involved, it's just not worth the risk."' Not many schools agree with Melbourne Grammar's hardline stance, though. St Michael's Grammar principal Simon Gipson said it would be more positive to educate children about the dangers of drugs, rather than drug test them. Collingwood College principal Melanie Ruchel said drug taking among students was rare and would not justify testing in schools. In the past decade, she said, there was just one incident where her school had to intervene and offered a student counselling and drug rehabilitation. "It's something that doesn't belong in schools," she said. "The concept of policing something shouldn't be a part of what a school does - which isn't to say a school shouldn't take action if something does occur - but it is not a school's core purpose." Debney Park Secondary College principal Michael O'Brien said his school, which has a high proportion of Muslim students from African backgrounds, had not had a drug problem for the past six years. "But before that, with a more Asian population, we had a very small number of students and their families who needed some assistance," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom