Pubdate: Tue, 27 Mar 2007
Source: Asbury Park Press (NJ)
Copyright: 2007 Asbury Park Press
Contact:  http://www.app.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/26
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

STUDENT VOICES

Grades 7-8

First Place: Random Testing Inefficient

When a magician sets up three cups, he'll ask you which one has a 
ball underneath. Your chance of finding the ball is pretty fair. But 
what if next time, the magician sets up 1,000 cups and asks you to 
find the ball? It would be next to impossible to guess where the ball was.

In the same way, high schools would have a hard time finding people 
who have used drugs. It becomes a wild goose chase when you don't 
have anything to help target them. There should be no random tests 
for drugs in high schools since they are inefficient, an invasion of 
privacy and unnecessary when teachers could learn to detect drug use.

Don't get me wrong. The law against drug possession and use should be 
enforced to ensure the safety of students. However, how effective 
will random screenings be for a large high school? Maybe students 
will be less tempted to drink alcohol or smoke tobacco, but at least 
someone out there will and might still get away with it, so 
randomizing drug tests won't prove effective. It would also be 
impossible to screen every student and would cost schools money for 
testing. Teachers lose time for instruction as well when students 
leave the classroom.

Picturing myself in high school, I can imagine what my turn to be 
tested would be like. Even if I hadn't taken any drugs, the urine 
test would invade my privacy. A day with a drug test wouldn't be a 
fun one. Whether or not the students had any drugs in their system, 
they'd still be nervous and uncomfortable. There is a better way to 
detect drug usage in students that would save money, relative privacy and time.

Teachers are perfect for tracking down students using drugs. They are 
with them all day, so if teachers knew how to identify signs of drug 
use, more students would be watched and found out without using up 
extra time or money.

Linda Qiu

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Eighth Grade

Second Place: A Response To Lawbreaking

Innocent people should have nothing to hide. That is the only 
statement that matters in the issue of conducting random tests for 
alcohol and other drugs in schools. Taking a drug test is not an 
issue of privacy but an issue of breaking the law. The only reason 
these students would want their right to privacy is if they had 
something to hide from their school, their parents and the law. This 
is why schools should conduct random tests for alcohol and other drugs.

The law means nothing in this country if it cannot be enforced. The 
schools can do something to enforce the laws against illegal drugs 
and under-aged drinking. By conducting random tests, schools will be 
able to punish students for breaking the law and show others the 
consequences. The number of kids using drugs and drinking will go down.

As for the students who argue against it, the assumption can only be 
made that they are the students taking the drugs and do not want to 
be caught. If one has nothing to hide, one should have no problem in 
complying with a simple test to prove himself innocent.

Random drug tests, some may say, are unethical, violating the rights 
of students. However, the schools are not doing so. All they ask is a 
simple drug test. They do not go to search students' homes, or 
wiretap the phones, or interrogate. All those would be unethical, 
which is why schools don't do them. The goal here is to enforce the 
law and send this message: If you can't do the time, don't do the crime.

Katherine Ripley

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Eighth Grade

Third Place: Keeping A Secret Delays Help

Have you ever had a secret that you felt the only person you could 
tell was your friend? You keep it secret from your parents and 
teachers, and your friend does the same. But you realize that keeping 
it a secret from the people who really care isn't helping. You know 
that you need to tell, but you don't feel gutsy enough to do it.

That's probably what it feels like for most teens taking drugs and 
alcohol. No teen wants to tell a parent or teacher about it. Some 
teens hardly tell their parents anything. To just tell a teacher or 
parent out of the blue that you've been drinking or smoking isn't easy.

That's where testing in schools comes in. Most teens are usually very 
secretive. They don't expect adults to find anything out. But if 
schools were able to conduct alcohol and drug tests, they might be 
able to catch unsuspecting students in the act. Those students will 
be able to meet and talk with parents and counselors about drugs. 
They will start to become more open toward adults. They will realize 
what they did was wrong, and they will probably never do it again.

Things like that can change students' lives. They will realize, after 
they stop drinking or smoking, who their real friends are. They will 
start to do better in school and in after-school activities. Instead 
of being a closed book, they will be open to parents, teachers and friends.

There's no doubt that high schools should conduct random tests for 
alcohol and other drugs. If students are caught taking drugs or 
drinking, it will make their lives take a turn for the better.

Patrick Carnevale

Seventh Grade

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Grades 9-12

First Place: A Lucky Draw On Drug Test

Round and round the wheel goes, who will get picked nobody knows. Our 
first contestant will be the valedictorian of our school. Like every 
other test she takes, I'm sure she'll pass this one, too. Next, we 
have the average student, whose fate we will soon find out. And last 
on our show today will be the "druggie" who is just glad to get out 
of class. Welcome to the Random Drug Testing Show.

Random drug testing takes away our rights as American citizens. The 
Fourth Amendment states "the right of people against unreasonable 
searches and seizures shall not be violated." Random drug testing 
violates this right.

Besides taking away our civil rights, drug testing is costly. The 
Dublin Board of Education in Ohio spent $70,000 to test 1,473 
students over two years, with only 20 positive results. Public 
schools could find better uses for this money.

Are drug tests really effective? Students have come up with a variety 
of ways to pass drug tests. According to students at Rushville High 
School in Indiana, putting salt or a strand of hair with hair spray 
in your urine sample will make you come out clean. Barely anyone is 
ever caught there. Random drug testing just promotes the use of 
different and even more dangerous drugs. Instead of smoking 
marijuana, which can stay in your body up to 30 days, students will 
drink alcohol and take Ecstasy, which stays in your body for only a few hours.

To the most prevalent users of drugs, is a random test a deterrent? 
Those students who use drugs frequently are less likely to give up 
just because of the chance of being found out.

To conclude our show, let's spin the wheel. The druggie wins the 
spin. Since he never thought he would win, this did not deter him 
from the use of alcohol and Ecstasy this past weekend. However, he 
was lucky with his choice of drugs. They have left his system. Did we 
just prove that he was not a druggie, or did we just fail to confirm 
what was already known or suspected? Now he's in the clear for he 
won't be tested again for a long time. Let's look for a better way.

Colleen Clare

11TH Grade

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Second Place: Random Testing Can Be Lifesaver

The crackdown on illegal drugs and underage drinking in high schools 
involves testing students in school, randomly, for any traces of 
drugs and/or alcohol. Do school administrations have the right to 
test students randomly? They do, and they should, because random 
testing protects the safety of students, enforces the law and is a 
practical course of action to reduce use of drugs and alcohol.

Possibly the most important reason is the safety of students. Drugs 
and alcohol pose a threat to the lives of students who use them, as 
well as others around them. These substances not only lead to serious 
health problems but also to death. By testing and informing students, 
maybe a life can be saved.

In 2002, the Supreme Court declared random drug testing 
constitutional. It is the obligation of high schools to protect and 
enforce the law. Schools can't afford to be a "safe haven" for 
illegal substances, and they can't impose an "if we don't know, it 
didn't happen" attitude. High schools have to send a clear message: 
They will not tolerate their students doing anything illegal.

Random testing is a practical way to reduce the use of drugs and 
underage drinking among students. Students have nothing to fear if 
they are not using drugs or alcohol.

If we, as a society, want to stop drug and alcohol use among 
teenagers, considering the safety of students, the law, and the goal 
of reducing substance use, there is no controversy. High schools 
should conduct random tests. If not, drugs and underage alcohol use 
might as well be legal.

Christopher Finan

10TH Grade

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Third Place: It Isn't Fair To Be Singled Out

Iam sitting here trying to imagine that I am a student who smokes 
marijuana on occasion. On a Monday morning, I am being pulled out of 
class to participate in random drug testing. I am especially nervous 
remembering Saturday night, when I happened to smoke with a few friends.

I sit in the bathroom in the nurse's office and stare nervously at 
the cup into which I now must urinate. Why is my privacy being 
invaded? I wasn't on school grounds. I am not a bad kid, but everyone 
will believe differently after this cup enlightens them of my actions.

I am now ashamed of myself. I can't look my parents or teachers in 
the eye. All they see in me is a pothead and a disappointment. My 
parents don't trust me, and the news of my having tested positive has 
spread throughout the school, causing students I don't even know to 
whisper and giggle as I pass them in the hallway. I know they have 
done it, too, and have just not been caught. It isn't fair that I 
have been singled out. Every day, all I do now is go to the school 
and come home. I take part in no extracurricular activities and am 
prohibited from leaving my house on the weekends.

I am not directly affected by this issue. But I still see the wrong 
in random drug testing in schools. It will strip students of their 
dignity. It exhibits the school's desire to control what you do, even 
when you are not on school grounds, leaving no freedom. Random drug 
testing in schools would be embarrassing to drug users and non-drug 
users alike.

Danielle Pacelli

12TH Grade
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman