Pubdate: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 Source: Kings County Record (CN NK) Copyright: 2008 CanadaEast Interactive, Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://kingscorecord.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact&paper=record Website: http://www.kingscorecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4656 Author: Gisele McKnight PRACTICAL HELP FOR PARENTS Communicate with your child's teachers, says Sussex Regional High School principal Dan McKiel. "Teachers often see changes in students, but they are reluctant to say. They may be trying to tell you something. Ask them, because a teacher is never going to come out and say 'I think you kids is doing drugs.'" Do I search my child's room? "I would," said RCMP Cst. Norm Adams, citing the argument that a child's room is still part of a house owned by the parent, who pays the bills to run that house. If an offending substance is found, Adams says don't confront the child with anger and a raised voice, and don't lie and say you found it while cleaning. Start the conversation this way: "I noticed your grades have slipped, and you're not having fun with your regular friends anymore, and I was worried about you. I found this in your room." Pour you heart out to your child, and if you get nowhere, call the professionals the police, the school principal and consult the parents of your child's friends for information. "Is it going to be embarrassing? Yes, but the alternative is far worse than not talking," he said. What to do if you find something: don't put it back, and don't throw it out. If you don't confront your child about it, the perception is it must be okay, says Adams. "Once again, you're enabling. If you don't correct the behaviour, you're allowing it to go on," he said. If your child comes home stoned and volatile, call the police. Some parents don't want to involve the police because they're afraid their child will end up with a criminal record, said Tambrie Hicks, admissions coordinator at Portage teen rehab centre. "So you're just going to let it go on?" she said. "It's hard, but they need rules and guidelines," and parents have to be consistent with those rules. If your child comes home stoned and just wants to go to bed, let him or her, because there is little to be gained by trying to reason with someone who's high, said Adams. "Let it go til they're straight and then confront them," he said. If you suspect your child of using the Internet for less than positive pursuits, take the monitor with you when you leave the house, said Adams. One parent said if her children close a window when she walks in the room, they automatically lose their computer privileges. If you suspect your child of wrongdoing while at a friend's house, drop in for a visit. Meet the parents of your child's friends, said Adams. Probe them about what they allow their kids to do: tell them you let your kids drink at home, and if they say, 'so do I', the visit's over, said Adams. Don't open the floodgates to bad behaviour by allowing smaller questionable behaviour, says Adams. He compares that to letting a child eat an apple in the livingroom. The next day, the child has spaghetti all over the livingroom, with the excuse that yesterday, you let me eat an apple in here, so what's wrong with the spaghetti. That permissiveness can lead to, 'You let me have a beer. What's the big deal? It's only a joint,' says Adams. "That's what we're doing when we say 'the law's there, the rules are there, but it's okay [to break them].' You're opening up a great big gate," he said. If your child needs Portage: there are 36 Portage beds for New Brunswick kids, 16 for probation services to use, and 20 for others who are referred by doctors, social workers, parents and kids themselves. But Hicks cautions that no child is going to succeed at Portage until they are ready to change their behaviour. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek