Pubdate: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 Source: Free Lance-Star, The (VA) Copyright: 2004 The Free Lance-Star Contact: http://fredericksburg.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1065 ZERO JUDGEMENT ZERO TOLERANCE CASE AT CHANCELLOR HIGH SCHOOL SHOW WHY SUCH POLICIES ARE IN NEED OF REVIEW Spotsy Schools vs. Analgesic Underworld RULES ARE RULES. Taken literally, that dogma means no questions, no shades of gray. It's the opposite of judiciousness. That's why, while "zero tolerance" policies are wildly popular with bureaucrats, they appear so unfair to everyone else when applied without regard to circumstances. Zero tolerance reared its empty head recently at our own Chancellor High School in Spotsylvania County when a routine search turned up two Tylenol tablets--the Medellin drug cartel is back!--in a student's backpack. The student drew a five-day suspension. A School Board-sanctioned policy, zero tolerance is part of Spotsylvania schools' binding Student Code of Conduct. In this case, all sides agree, school authorities followed the policy--from the search, to the disciplinary action, to the student's rejected appeal--to the letter. No anguishing here, no thinking that might cause a headache requiring a couple of Tylenol. The boot was clearly prescribed by a policy that averts any liability threat to the school system. The policy does, however, allow limited School Board discretion, which is why the Chancellor High student served only half the recommended 10-day suspension. The School Board would do well to review its zero-tolerance policy. Room certainly exists for self-criticism. The disciplined girl is a Governor's School student, a testament to her academic prowess. Until she became a nefarious Tylenol possessor, she had compiled a blemish-free school-conduct record. During her exile, she had to rely on fellow students to help her maintain her rigorous workload. This is education? How imbecilic. No one suggests that school officials get pharmacy degrees to learn the difference between over-the-counter painkiller and illicit drugs, or that administrators lose interest in what students bring to the schoolhouse. But punishment should fit the crime--or, as in this case, the noncrime. Even in a school, where security is crucial, justice, which requires wisdom, must have a place. The Spotsylvania school system should revisit its policy of zero tolerance--with a bucket of whitewash. It should save just enough to expunge this undeserved blot from the file of an exemplary student. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh