Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jan 2002 Source: WorldNetDaily (US Web) Copyright: 2002 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc. Contact: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/655 Section: Commentary Author: Ellen Makkai SCHOOLS SNOOP FOR SCANDAL What happened to readin' and writin' and 'rithmetic? Today students are being grilled like delinquents about non-academics such as sex, drugs and hooch. Invasive school surveys ask students if they drink, smoke, snort or steal. Are their parents political, abusive, divorced or dead? Do they believe in God, hell and heaven? Have they ever been bullied, pregnant, arrested or raped? Do they floss, bike or jog? Are they fat, skinny or suicidal? Do they have sex, hobbies or a gun? Never are they asked if they are embarrassed by the questions. Nor are they read their Miranda rights. School, government and psychology confederates seem pathologically compelled to guinea pig our kids. Questionnaires arrive from groups like the Centers for Disease Control, Weekly Reader, the U.S. Department of Education, the Kaiser Family Foundation and National Parents Commission. Government and private grants seduce districts into using these student interrogations, which are then used to convince benefactors that districts need help the bigger the problems, the bigger the prize. "If a district proves itself to be in rough enough shape," financial faucets open, says Edward Freeland, associate director of the Survey Research Center at Princeton University. "Consequently, surveys contain some bizarre questions." Not only are questions bizarre, many are offensive. And parents seldom know Junior is spilling the beans, says family advocate Brad Dacus, president of the non-profit Pacific Justice Institute. Organizations hope data will translate into programs that preemptively squelch a myriad of social evils. But do they? Principal Frank DeAngelis said the Columbine killers projected no criminal indicators at school before their rampage. Also, data is compromised. A 12-year-old New Jersey jokester confided he morphed into an 18-year-old Chinese girl on his survey. Another supposedly had 12 sex partners in a week. Anonymity isn't guaranteed because some schools pre-labeled polls or have kids sign names. Teacher integrity is questioned they snoop, say enraged Oregonians, whose kids responded to the Values Appraisal Scale. If school boards and legislators don't halt the practice, students will continue to slog through surveys, exposing family ills and ids to the scrutiny of strangers. "Notification and permission slips are so vague, no one suspects what's happening," says parent Carole Nunn, whose complaint prompted recent New Jersey state legislation. With any hint of a survey, "parents need to read them and opt kids out." New Jersey's law states that students cannot be quizzed on personal issues unless parents give informed written consent. It is the only state to do so. The new federal education reform bill tried for similar protection. Groups like the American Psychological Association worried parents would deny them access to their kids lobbied successfully to have it diluted. "If you could eliminate an entire race, would you? Which one?" a Bettendorf, Iowa, survey asked in 1992. Youngsters get details on oral sex in one question on the CDC's 1999 Youth Risk Behavior Surveys given to grades seven to 12. Another lists street names where illegal drugs are sold and asks which substances respondents have sampled. Dr. Freeland wonders if such questions nudge kids to explore behavior noted in the questions themselves. "There is no data about the potential harm rendered," he says. This begs the question: Does negative scrutiny send negative signals? Is a child's self-perception damaged when respected adults deem it necessary to quiz her on immoral and illegal conduct? "We need to look at these factors," says Dr. Freeland. Ask me; I know. I am a refugee of childhood physical and psychological inquisitions. My psychiatrist father saw me as a handy specimen for perpetual analysis. I was a "polio pioneer," testing the Salk vaccine in the early '50s. Rorschach inkblots probed my psyche. As a humiliated 11-year-old, I was photographed in my underpants at school for posture screening. Intermingled throughout was a psychiatric couch. I wondered what acute personal flaws prompted the unceasing assessments. When I taught 30 years ago, family sovereignty was honored, except in unique crises. Students concentrated on academics, athletics and the arts. Today, educators must refocus on that original scholastic mandate. And ditch the ignoble school survey, which is little more than a sociological strip search. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D