Pubdate: Mon, 16 Apr 2007 Source: Times-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2007 The Times-Herald Contact: http://times-herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1054 Author: Winston Skinner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) HERITAGE DOING DRUG TESTING The Heritage School has added a policy that school leaders hope will make it easier for students to say no to drugs. Random drug testing is now part of the contract between parents and the local college preparatory private school. Periodically, student names are pulled using a lottery system. The students selected have a bit of hair snipped, and the hair is tested. "We want to be able to say we are a 100 percent drug free campus, and we're doing everything we can to make that" a reality, said Judith Griffith, headmaster at Heritage. Griffith said several factors led to the drug testing policy. The major one was the death of young people in Newnan from drug use -- one a year for three consecutive years. "That began to concern me," she said. Griffith was aware that alcohol abuse could cause problems for young people, but the area deaths "had more to do with pills," she said. She said that a student who came to school inebriated would exhibit behavior that would tip off adults. With pills, "you might not notice," Griffith said. "That was weighing on my mind." When Griffith attended a meeting of the Georgia Independent School Association, she went to a program given by Tom Johnson, headmaster for more than two decades at Bayside Academy, a private school in Daphne, Ala., a Mobile suburb. Bayside was the first school in the Mobile area to make mandatory testing for drugs part of its school policy. "I was impressed with what he had to say," she said. The program adopted at Heritage is closely modeled on Bayside's effort, which was implemented using a five-year grant and extensive research. Griffith presented her concerns and the testing idea to Heritage's board. "The board was enthusiastic about this and gave me the support to move forward," she said. Students also expressed no problems with the testing concept. A few parents voiced concerns, but those generally disappeared after they talked with their children. Meetings were held with parents to hear their concerns and talk about drug testing for about 18 months prior to implementation of the new policy. "Most of the parents, when they understood this is not a program designed to catch kids" were okay with the idea, Griffith said. "It is a program designed to give them a reason to say 'no.'" Johnson said the hair testing process is a bit more expensive than urine testing. He noted, however, that if offers more data -- showing any drug use in the past 90 days, as opposed to as little as 24 hours for some subtances with urine testing. The hair clipping can also be handled by a staff member of either gender for both male and female students. Johnson determined it was "the cleanest method by which we could test students." Griffith said results are absolutely confidential, and she would not talk about specifics so far. She did say the results so far "have validated our feelings that we did not have a problem." If a student should test positive, parents would be notified, and they would be given opportunities for their child to receive counseling or other treatment. If a second testing, 90 days later, resulted in another positive result, the student would have to leave Heritage. The parents and student could petition for the student to return after completion of a successful drug treatment program. "We do believe kids can be turned around," the local headmaster stated. Students are not the only people included in the testing program. While students are being tested through a lottery system, all board members and teachers will eventually -- and voluntarily -- be tested. That policy was put in place "so we could say we are a 100 percent drug-free campus," Griffith said. Griffith emphasized the drug test results are being kept completely separate from all other student records, and staff members who send transcripts and other academic information on students will not have access to drug test data. "I'm not ever going to talk about the results," Griffith promised. The drug testing policy was instituted at Heritage as the second semester of this school term began. "We're not doing this because we felt we were a drug school," Griffith emphasized. The policy is an acknowledgment of "all that's out there" which "our kids are exposed to." She said her goal was for students to "have the tools to deal with" peer pressure. Griffith noted the world today is much different from just a few years ago. Both she and Johnson said the testing gives teens a solid reason to stand firm in the face of peer pressure. Knowing they could be tested "gives them an easy way to say 'no," Johnson said. He said he is perfectly willing to be the heavy, who gets the blame when a student from Bayside explains why he cannot take drugs at a party. Students in grades nine and up can be selected to get their hair clipped through the lottery system at Heritage. Younger students learn about being drug free through the Students Are For Education program. SAFE is offered to local schools by the Coweta County Sheriff's Office. Heritage also is working with FCD Educational Services to provide information about drugs and alcohol to both students and parents. FCD is a non-profit substance abuse prevention organization based in Newton, Mass. Roger Waitt of FCD will be at Heritage this week speaking to students, parents and faculty. An annual visit by someone from FCD is part of Heritage's anti-drug effort. The partnership with FCD will also enable the school to address the more thorny problem of alcohol abuse. "What they do on weekends is of concern to us," Griffith said of Heritage's students. Griffith said she and other leaders at Heritage want to find "the best programs to do the best we can for our students." This will mark Waitt's second visit to Heritage. "He has a really good rapport with the students." Data on the number of schools nationwide which test students for drugs was not readily available. According to the Christian Science Monitor, a 2003 University of Michigan study showed that 5 percent of schools tested student athletes, and only 2 percent of schools tested participants in extracurricular activities. "Some 18 percent of schools tested for any reason, including suspicion of drug use," according to the 2005 Monitor article. The trend is growing, particularly at private schools where parents enter into a contract with the school. Bayside began testing students in 2000. "The independent schools in the Mobile area got together back in 2000 to see about the possibility of our schools doing drug testing. We looked at it as a health issue," Johnson said. Mobile school leaders discussed what they could do about both drug and alcohol abuse. Testing offered "a way we could deter drug use a lot easier than alcohol," Johnson said. The Mobile effort included visits from the district attorney and a judge from New Orleans, where efforts were already under way. "We did our homework," he said. Time was also taken to explain the process to both parents and students. Bayside's testing program was soon followed by testing at two other Mobile area private schools. "We did not lose a single student," Johnson said. He said new families coming to Bayside know about the testing process. "They make a choice to come to Bayside," he noted. Drug testing at Heritage and other schools -- particularly private schools -- is coming to be expected and welcome. "New parents coming in" have said they like Heritage's approach, Griffith stated. "It's becoming more and more a part of life." Programs vary from school-to-school. At Bayside, every student gives a hair clipping "one time every year" with random tests following, Johnson said. At Heritage, a lottery is used to select students for testing at random times. "I think every school that does it, does it a little bit differently," Griffith noted. Johnson reflected on the impact of the program at Bayside. "I've been headmaster for about 25 years," he said. "It's probably number one on my list of the best things I've ever done." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake