Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Pubdate: Wednesday 7th October 98 Author: By John Clare, Education Editor RANDOM DRUG TESTS AT 100 INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS RANDOM drug testing of pupils has been introduced by more than 100 leading independent schools, the Headmasters' Conference said yesterday. Heads now assumed that, in line with national statistics, at least 25 per cent of their GCSE pupils had experimented with illegal drugs and about 10 per cent took them regularly. The number of schools that automatically expelled children for a first offence was now declining, they said. The Rev Dr John Barrett, head of The Leys School in Cambridge, who led a conference working party on drugs, said: "We are recommending heads to adopt a more flexible approach. We think the rules should be that any pupil involved in drugs loses the right to be a member of the school community but may remain, subject to random tests." He was speaking after the conference in Jersey had been told by Trevor Grice, an international expert on the effects of drugs, that the jury on marijuana was back and their verdict was "guilty". "We now know that short-term memory - which is what young people need when they are learning - is the first thing to go when they take dope," he said. "In the same way as sunburn doesn't disappear when the sun goes down, so 50 per cent of the effect of smoking dope over the weekend is still there between four and six days later. The second thing to go is the drug-taker's ability to think about the future which is followed by disrespect for authority, lying, secret phone calls and stealing from their parents." Some heads disagreed with the flexible approach that the conference was recommending. Ian Templeton, head of Glenalmond, near Perth, said: "Our policy is one offence and you're out. That's it." Michael Mavor, head of Rugby, said: "Our aim is to reduce the number of pupils who experiment with drugs. So we expel anyone we catch. We also use random testing if pupils' behaviour or academic performance leads us to suspect that they may be taking drugs. It's proved to be very effective. We used to have quite a lot of people smoking cannabis; now there are almost none." However Mark Pyper, head of Gordonstoun, where Princes Philip, Charles, Andrew and Edward were pupils, said drugs were so freely available that taking them was equivalent to smoking cigarettes in the Sixties. "We use random testing after a first offence." Edward Gould, the head at Marlborough, where urine testing is used after a first offence and if staff have reason to be worried about a pupil's lifestyle, said: "In this respect, we mirror society. Drugs affect every school in this conference." - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady