Pubdate: Mon,  3 Nov 2003
Source: Eagle, The (DC Edu)
Copyright: 2003 The Eagle
Contact: http://www.eagle.american.edu/section.cfm/48/5/0/1
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1820
Website: http://www.eagle.american.edu/
Author: Aaron Biterman

STUDENTS MUST TAKE PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY

What Do You Think About AU's New Drug Policy?

AU's new drug policy, which notifies parents of students for anything from 
a minor infraction to major abuse of illegal drugs, is a flawed policy. The 
administration appears to recognize the maturity level of its students in 
some areas of campus life -University bureaucrats aren't calling parents 
when their son or daughter is doing poorly in a class or doesn't attend 
enough classes. But such is not the case when it comes to drug or alcohol use.

The first flaw with the new policy (as well as the old policy) is obvious: 
The policy of parental notification treats adults as children, thereby 
infantilizing perfectly capable college students. We, as sovereign 
individuals, own our own bodies and make conscious choices regarding our 
actions. Just like any other adult, it is inappropriate for the legal or 
disciplinary situations of AU students to be shared with anyone other than 
the appropriate authorities involved in specific case instances. For those 
who disagree, consider AU staff and faculty, also presumably legal adults: 
Is the parental notification policy the same for administration, faculty, 
staff, and students? No. Because students, in this instance, are viewed as 
inferiors despite the fact that the majority of students have the same 
adult legal status as others present on the AU campus.

Seeing that some AU students are financially independent, it's ridiculous 
that the University would stoop so low as to consult parental units about 
matters that may not even apply to the parents of any given individual. Not 
everyone relies on their parents for support at the University level. How 
dare our arrogant administration take issues of a personal nature to those 
who not only have no say in some of our lives, but also people who some of 
us don't even speak to. I have several acquaintances that don't even talk 
to their parents, let alone receive financial support from them.

For those students who are close to their parents, the policy undermines 
parental authority. Parents are constantly told to establish open, honest, 
and trusting relationships with their children. This sensible goal is 
undermined by the administrative bureaucracy substituting its judgment for 
that of its students and their parents.

Personal responsibility should be fostered at a university setting, not 
discouraged. College is a stepping stone between the shelter of home life 
and the real world. It's a relatively protected environment in which 
students learn how to take care of themselves and in which students are 
supposed to develop a sense of personal responsibility. Are 18-year-old 
adults able to take responsibility for their own acts and straighten out 
their own mistakes? Or should the University be the students' baby-sitter? 
Our administration is obligated to be explicit about how it views its 
students and its relationship with them; It doesn't trust us, nor does it 
believe we're capable of making our own decisions properly. What an 
abomination!

Personal privacy and health matters are also of grave importance to the 
University's flawed, statist parental notification policy. AU's current 
policy is clearly a model of scrutiny and invasion of personal privacy. By 
notifying parents upon violation, the policy encourages students who engage 
in risky behaviors to take extreme steps to avoid getting caught. Our 
University's policies should reflect those of an open society that values 
individual privacy in matters of health and rule infractions. Instead, the 
parental notification policy does the opposite.

AU is a private institution; No federal mandates regarding parental 
notification apply unless similar policies are adopted by AU governing 
bodies. Students are considered by the courts to be adults and there is no 
reason why they should be treated any differently by the University. Who 
knows what's next if the current trend continues? Parent-professor 
conferences? Meetings with President Ladner and the 'rents over fall break? 
Not likely. So why can't the administration simply recognize individual 
sovereignty on an issue that involves both personal privacy and health?

Students attend AU with the understanding (and the contractual agreement) 
that they have the power and prerogative to govern themselves. At the 
university level, students live under policies of their own creation, 
whether through direct referendum or by representation on governing bodies. 
To take the adjudication of drug or alcohol violations out of students' 
hands is a step in the wrong direction because it removes self-governance, 
an aspect of the University system that sets it apart from other 
institutions in the country.

Parental notification, while a nice idea for those attempting to overcome 
the problem of college drinking in a single bound, inappropriately widens 
the University's jurisdiction and thereby breaches students' rights by 
revealing aspects of their behavior that only they should have the right to 
disclose. The parental notification policy is reminiscent of the measures 
taken to discipline pre-school students. This kind of discipline should be 
seen as beneath us in a University setting. The University administration 
as well as all AU students who value personal responsibility, 
self-governance, privacy, and health matters should be ashamed that we have 
allowed ourselves to sink to this level. To return to how university 
students were treated before the late '60s would be a giant step backward 
for students, professors, and administrators alike.

Do you oppose the University's childish parental notification policy? If 
so, join our campaign by e-mailing  and expressing your 
interest. Together, the student body can hopefully bring about a more 
mature policy for our campus community.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake