Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 Source: Bradenton Herald (FL) Copyright: 2004 Bradenton Herald Contact: http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradentonherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/58 Author: Emily Mady AGAINST DRUG TESTING Although I have not heard all the details of President Bush's $23 million proposal for drug testing in schools, I know enough to disagree, for many reasons. I think the testing will cause many disruptions and total chaos. First, I think if we started drug testing at my high school, a lot of the students doing drugs would either skip school so they don't get tested or drop out. Another situation that could happen is humiliation. If it got around school that someone tested positive for drugs, it could cause huge conflicts - students yelling at other students and rumors around school causing fights. This would also be a distraction to learning. Students may get nervous about drug testing and not concentrate on tests and homework. Students who know about the drug testing could quit until they are tested and go back to the drugs afterwards. These days high school-age students are very knowledgeable about drugs. If they were being tested for drugs they would find ways to get around the test. If students were being tested for pot, cocaine or some other illegal drugs they could get cough medicine off a drugstore counter or from their house and overdose. If President Bush is trying to get rid of drug use from students he would have to take items off the counter which help people for a common cold. Even though I am a high school student who does not support drug use, I believe that testing for drugs at school isn't a good choice. In many schools there is a much larger number of students than administrators. I think parents would know if their child needed a drug test more than the administrators. This is an issue that needs to be left at home. Emily Mady, Grade 9 Manatee High School Bradenton - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin