Pubdate: Sat, 05 Apr 2003 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2003 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Peter Munro and Gerard Noonan DRUG TESTING STUDENTS A SUCCESS - ON THE SURFACE The use of random drug tests at several private schools has dramatically cut drug usage among students, say principals. But a drug agency says drugs remain a problem among young people and the lack of positive tests might mean students were adept at confounding the results. Several private schools using random urine tests on students who have a history of taking illicit drugs claim to have recorded almost no positive results in up to four years of testing. The headmaster of St Andrew's Cathedral School, Phillip Heath, said up to 10 students had been subject to random tests in the past four years and none had returned a positive. But Mr Heath said he was not so naive to believe there was zero usage among his students. Reddam House, where students are selected to give on-the-spot tests by a randomised computer program, have conducted just two tests in four years because it "didn't seem necessary to test any more", said director Graeme Crawford. Reddam has used its anti-drug stance as a marketing tool in its attempt to carve out a niche for itself as an alternative to established eastern suburbs schools. Mr Crawford said the fact that only one student had tested positive showed testing had rid the school of illicit drugs. The National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at the University of NSW doubts testing stopped drug use, and suggests it may just drive it underground. The centre's information manager, Paul Dillon, said given the statistical prevalence of drug use among teenagers it would be a "very foolish person who believed just because they have random drug testing in schools it eliminates drug use". "Cannabis is used by a third of high school students. If you have a school that all of a sudden doesn't have any cannabis use, that is pretty amazing and the world would want to know why," he said. Geelong Grammar, the first school in Australia to introduce drug testing, is also claiming success with its approach, citing the fact the "one or two" students who had shown up positive out of dozens tested had left the school. The NSW Department of Education, responsible for more than 2200 government schools, has a policy of suspending a student found possessing illicit drugs and advising police and the child's parents. The department's policy requires students to take part in a "targeted intervention program". Other schools wrestling with the drugs issue include StIgnatius' College Riverview, which from next term will test any student identified as having a "drug habit or serious problem". The headmaster, Shane Hogan, said the policy acknowledged the need to give a second chance to boys caught experimenting with drugs, although anyone caught supplying drugs would be asked to leave the school. "If we say we want a boy to take a drug test, what we are saying is you are being given a second chance but you have to work with us," Mr Hogan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek