Pubdate: Wed, 03 Nov 2004 Source: St. Albert Gazette (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 St. Albert Gazette Contact: http://www.stalbertgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2919 Author: Mark Wells STUDENTS ID DRUG PROBLEM Survey Suggests Not Enough Is Being Done To Combat Drugs On School Premises School satisfaction surveys suggest parents and teachers may be in the dark about the real level of drug activity in St. Albert schools. St. Albert Protestant and Catholic school districts compiled responses to their annual satisfaction surveys. But while both districts recorded high satisfaction rates for school safety and the quality of education, they also showed low marks for their efforts to keep drugs out of the city's schools. Asked whether they were satisfied with how effective the cross-district drug protocol is in deterring students from bringing drugs and other illegal substances to school, only 47 per cent of Grade 10 students and 41 per cent of Grade 12 students in the Protestant district responded positively. Parents, however, were 79 per cent satisfied. Staff were even more satisfied, with 88 per cent agreeing the protocol is an effective deterrent. The Catholic division recorded similar ratings, although the results are not directly comparable because of different data compilation methods. Grade 10 and 12 students' satisfaction ratings were lumped together. Only 53 per cent were satisfied with efforts to keep drugs off school property, while their parents showed a 75 per cent satisfaction rate. Protestant school trustees received their survey results at the last public board meeting, but initially expressed little concern about the low rating. Deputy superintendent Barry Wowk sits on the joint district Student Conduct Committee, which developed the drug protocol. He said the survey doesn't provide answers, "it asks more questions." "Is the fact students don't rate [the protocol] because schools aren't addressing the presence of drugs, or is it simply that the drug protocol is not helping, or is it the fact that nothing is working?" he asked. "The bottom line is we need to ask some more questions." Wowk said the district's drug protocol is only one part of a multi-pronged approach to dealing with the presence of drugs in schools and a negative response to the protocol's merit doesn't mean schools' total effort is a failure. "It's not new. We know we have a situation to deal with ... the bottom line is we're doing a number of projects to deal with the situation." Greater St. Albert Catholic division principal Emilie Keane was even more blunt in her reaction to the results. "We certainly make huge efforts to keep drugs out of schools but the reality is they are still getting into our school yards," Keane said. Students' satisfaction, she added reflects a "reality that kids understand and see, which is different from what parents and others in the city believe. And [student responses] support the research we've done." Keane said she didn't want to lead parents to believe local schools are unsafe and stressed other communities are facing the same problem. But she hopes an honest assessment of the results would spur a greater community effort to address the problem of illegal drugs. "We need to be realistic about what's out there before we can get realistic with the solutions," she said. "[Students] are the direct target of drug pushers." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin