Pubdate: Sat, 08 Nov 2008 Source: News-Press (Fort Myers, FL) Copyright: 2008 The News-Press Contact: http://www.news-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1133 Author: Sam Cook Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) PARENTS RESIST SCHOOL INTRUSION ON KID'S LIFE Dustin Worth admits to having a libertarian lean. "I'm only registered Republican because the third party is not an electable option," says Dustin, 38. The less government intrusion, the better for him. Dustin and wife, Sandra, who live in Lehigh Acres, maintain the same philosophy about the Lee County School District. Educate our children, but refrain from asking unnecessary and personal questions that are none of the district's business. "We are fed up with government schools dictating to parents as to how they decide what's best for our children," says Sandra Worth, 42. The Worths bumped heads with the district in September when their son, Alec, a sixth-grader at Oak Hammock Middle in Fort Myers, was not allowed to take his class picture for the school yearbook. When Dustin signed off on a release of the directory information code of conduct for students grades 6-12, he took one exception, drawing a line through the last sentence. The sentence is new to the release this year, according to district spokesman Joe Donzelli. It reads: Permission is also given to allow my child to participate in anonymous surveys involving the use of tobacco, alcohol and other drugs. The Worths want to know why the district needs to survey students about smoking, drinking and drugging. Dustin sent a letter to Principal Clayton Simmons on Sept. 25, asking Alec's picture be taken on makeup day. His attorney sent an Oct. 14 letter to Simmons and staff attorney Robert Dodig with a similar request. Both were denied. Dustin says Dodig told him the sentence was included in the paragraph to make sure the information fit on one page. Dustin believes the information should be broken into three parts, allowing three decisions. "I definitely understand the family's point of view," Donzelli says. "But the beauty of dealing with the school district is nothing is written in stone. "We review our policies. That part is an addition this year. We could have come to an amicable agreement." Amicable is not an adjective I would use to describe Sandra. "I find it very difficult to believe that they didn't deliberately put the statement in the same paragraph, knowing that most parents would simply sign, thinking they were giving permission for the picture and media release," she says. Sandra reluctantly signed the form, and Alec took his picture Oct. 29, but the Worths were not one, big happy family. School board member Bob Chilmonik says the district didn't try to sneak the survey sentence past parents. "The board approved that, but to hold back a photograph is wrong," he says. "We should offer an out for parents who want to sign and agree to everything else." While Chilmonik understands the Worths' chagrin, he defends use of anonymous surveys as a valuable tool. "We find out how good or bad our drug problem is in Lee County," he says. "I support the information we're getting because it helps students with alcoholic and drug problems." Dustin asks if surveys are used to garner additional funding for the district. "That is not even in the conversation," Donzelli says. "We're just trying to gather data." Donzelli says various organizations use anonymous information to determine programs and policies. "If we have students admitting to use of drugs and alcohol, we're on the right path to helping them," he says. "I think the key to that is 'anonymous.' "I don't see how that would be detrimental to the operation of the school. We want to reduce the number of children using alcohol and tobacco before the legal age." But the Worths believe asking questions about tobacco, alcohol and drug use is a violation of student and parental rights. "You either let them do whatever they want with your child, meaning your right as a parent stops at the school door, or you say no," Dustin says. "The pendulum's swung too far. There is no common sense. It's like the school's zero tolerance rule." Sandra says the district needs to educate children and let parents raise them. She wants other parents to know what is going on within the district. "Questions about tobacco, alcohol and drugs should be discussed at the dinner table at the children's own level and pace," she says. "We don't want to create a glass bubble, but we need to take back our parental rights on what is taught to kids other than basic academics." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin