Pubdate: Wed, 29 Mar 2006 Source: Indiana Daily Student (IN Edu) Copyright: 2006 Indiana Daily Student Contact: http://www.idsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1319 Author: Ids Editorial Board Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DRUG TESTS WE SAY: Random screenings alone aren't the most effective way to prevent high school substance abuse Allow us a moment to attempt to summarize the Bush administration's doctrine of mad science. * Stem cells could potentially help the terminally ill, but doctors can only use the limited and already-created supply available. * A top climate expert at NASA says the space agency's public affairs office tried to silence his views of immediate reducing greenhouse gases linked to global warming. * Instead of putting money into sensible sex education and providing information on forms of birth control, the government is content to fund short-sighted abstinence-only education. Now adolescent drug use is the latest casualty of this war on science. The administration would like to devote 50 percent more federal resources -- totaling about $15 million -- to random drug testing in high schools, while simultaneously slashing $387 million from drug education in schools. We're not even convinced this is an ideological divide on science anymore. It's beginning to seem closer to an intellectual divide. The proposal's reception has been fairly lukewarm in high schools, although they have a constitutional right to randomly drug test any student involved in extracurricular activities (established in a 2002 Supreme Court decision). Drug Czar John Walters and his staff are on a blitz across the country to convince schools of the virtues of random drug testing. We're not quite ready to slam the door completely on random testing, even if the Fourth Amendment entanglements seem less obvious to the Supreme Court than to us. Naturally, there will be some students who recklessly engage in substance abuse and their habits might not be known without such a test. But there are still a number of reasons why drug testing alone is not the most effective method, chief among these the fact that only students enrolled in extracurricular activities are subject to the tests. Also, random drug testing is more punitive than preventive, even though schools can't send violators off to the police. The explicit goal of drug testing is to catch who's taking drugs; implicitly there is a scare factor introduced to the equation, where the fear is getting caught, and that's enough of an incentive not to do the drugs in the first place. But common sense tells us that teenagers engage in all sorts of activity, be it staying out late or having sex in the basement, never assuming they'll be caught. The hard data doesn't support testing, either. Few studies have analyzed random testing, but two -- one conducted by the University of Michigan, the other funded by the U.S. Education Department and produced by Institute for Behavior and Health -- seem to suggest random testing doesn't decrease the rate of drug use. Walters contends the war on teenage drug abuse will be won in schools. We agree, but not with the plan of action Walters has put forward. As we've written before, the administration needs to recognize that education is the silver bullet, the most important thing when it comes to preventing, or lessening, behavior that society frowns upon. To think otherwise is problematic. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom