Pubdate: Tue, 23 Apr 2002 Source: Home News Tribune (NJ) Copyright: 2002 Home News Tribune Contact: http://www.thnt.com/hnt/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/825 Author: Debra Donald HONESTY WORST POLICY AT EDISON HIGH SCHOOL My husband and I have always told our boys that if you tell the truth, you won't be in nearly as much trouble as you will if you lie. As parents, we try to instill a sense of honesty, integrity and character in our kids. The school plays an important part by educating and disciplining our kids while they are in their care. However, I do not believe they have a right to discipline my children (or anyone else's) for inappropriate behavior that occurs outside of school or a school-sponsored event. That is exactly what happened in Edison High School. My son was rewarded for his honesty in saying that he had tried marijuana (off school premises) by being suspended from school for five days. When I would not allow the principal to question him about other students, he extended his suspension to 10 days and vowed to recommend expulsion. I do not condone the use of illegal drugs; however, I also believe that if a student admits to a school administrator that he has tried marijuana off school premises that he should not be suspended from school. Of course, if he has used or been under the influence while attending school, the schools have a right and an obligation to take appropriate measures of discipline and parental notification. This is not the case in the Edison school district. For telling the truth, my son was denied any instruction by our schools for one month! After that he was admitted into an alternate program which the administrators purport is equal to the education he was getting in his normal classes. Not! In my son's regular physics class, they did not watch "Jurassic Park." In his accelerated trigonometry class, a teacher instructed him; he wasn't handed a book and expected to learn on his own. In English class his quizzes were based on the book they were reading, not a film they had watched. Kids and parents have to obey the laws, but so do school administrators. The law says no one can demand that a student be tested for drugs unless he exhibits physical or psychological symptoms of being under the influence of drugs. This is not the case in Edison High School. The law also states that if a student is removed from the general student body and put into an alternative program, he must be instructed following the curriculum of his regular classes. Nowhere in the law does it state that school administrators may discipline a child by providing him with an inferior education. As parents we need to be vigilant with our children. We need to be sure our kids know drugs are dangerous (yes, even marijuana). My kids know if you break our rules you pay. They know if they break school rules they pay twice -- once at school and once home. That is our right as their parents. I never realized that administrators could punish students for breaking our rules on "our time." Even if I had known this, I wouldn't have told my son, for fear he would break the rules just so he could sleep all morning and watch movies all afternoon. Debra Donald Edison - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens