Pubdate: Sun, 15 Jul 2001 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2001 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Dan Rather LEGAL DRUGS: IT'S TIME TO FACE THIS TEEN PROBLEM While Congress and President Bush debate the merits of testing and accountability, here's another aspect of the education debate that's worthy of consideration: kids on drugs. The problem has become so pervasive that it is driving experienced teachers, perhaps our greatest national treasure and our best chance of improving education, out of the classroom. I recently spoke to a high-school teacher with more than 25 years of experience. Those who know her work -- in her district and in the educational community at large -- know her as not just a good teacher but also a great one -- the kind of teacher who changes lives. This teacher said that this just-finished school year would be her last. She is taking early retirement, she said, because she knows that she can expect more than a quarter of next fall's incoming class to be on drugs. The government spends billions to fight a so-called war on drugs, and keeping kids off drugs is a major part of the effort. In recent years, the re-emergence of casual attitudes about marijuana among young people has been cause for concern, as has the rise in use of "designer" and "club" drugs such as Ecstasy. To the extent that these substances are abused by school-age children, they are an education problem. But these are not the drugs our teacher was talking about. Rather, the drug use driving her out is perfectly legal -- kids in their teens and younger on such prescription drugs as Ritalin, Adderall and Prozac. Doctors, often under pressure from parents, are starting kids on drug regimens, and they are doing it, in some cases, as early as the first years of elementary school. Welcome to the other drug problem. The teacher I spoke to is from a school that serves a fairly well-to-do suburb of a big city. This drug problem, far from being a stubborn accompaniment to poverty, seems to be a reflection of middle-class achievement anxiety. Most of the prescriptions are being written to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, which has been diagnosed in ever greater numbers since the start of the 1990s -- a time during which use of Ritalin soared. As for my teacher friend, she increasingly found herself in a situation where she was called upon to be more clinician than teacher. When a significant portion of your class acts unpredictably and you don't know whether the students' moods spring from natural sources or a drug, she told me, actual teaching takes a back seat. That's why she left. But the problem remains. Until we as a nation wake up to the syndrome of parenting with pills and do something to address it, it likely will worsen. For now, it looks as if our future is on drugs. - -- Rather is anchor of CBS Evening News and a native Texan. - --- MAP posted-by: GD