A Plan for Us All
CONTENTS
WHAT CAN WE DO?
CHILDREN AND DRUGS
Extent of Alcohol and Other Drug Use
Fact Sheet: Drugs and Dependence
How Drug Use Develops
Fact Sheet: Youth and Alcohol
Effects of Drug Use
Fact Sheet: Cocaine: Crack
Drug Use and Learning
A PLAN FOR ACTION
What Parents Can Do
Instilling Responsibility
Supervising Activities
Fact Sheet: Signs of Drug Use
Recognizing Drug Use
What Schools Can Do
Assessing the Problem
Enforcing Policy Seeing Policy
Teaching About Drug Prevention
Fact Sheet: Tips for Selecting Drug Prevention Materials
Enlisting the Community's Help
Fact Sheet: Legal Questions on Search and Seizure
Fact Sheet: Legal Questions on Suspension and Expulsion
What Students Can Do
Learning the Facts
Helping to Fight Drug Use
What Communities Can Do
Providing Support
Involving Law Enforcement
CONCLUSION
SPECIAL SECTIONS
Teaching About Drug Prevention
How the Law Can Help
Resources
Specific Drugs and Their Effects
Sources of Information
References
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
WHAT CAN WE DO?
A Plan for Achieving Schools Without Drugs
PARENTS:
1. Teach standards of right and wrong, and demonstrate these
standards through personal example.
2. Help children to resist poor pressure to use alcohol and
other drugs by supervising their activities, knowing who
their friends are, and talking with them about their
interests and problems.
3. Be knowledgeable about drugs and signs of drug use. When
symptoms are observed, respond promptly.
SCHOOLS:
4. Determine the extent and character of alcohol and other
drug use and monitor that use regularly.
5. Establish clear and specific rules regarding alcohol and
other drug use that include strong corrective actions.
6. Enforce established policies against drug use fairly and
consistently. Ensure adequate security measures to
eliminate drugs from school premises and school functions.
7. Implement a comprehensive drug prevention curriculum for
kindergarten through grade 12, teaching that drug use is
wrong and harmful, and supporting and strengthening
resistance to drugs.
8. Reach out to the community for support and assistance in
making the school's anti-drug policy and program work.
Develop collaborative arrangements in which school
personnel, parents, school boards, law enforcement
officers, treatment organizations, and private groups can
work together to provide necessary resources.
STUDENTS:
9. Learn about the effects of alcohol and other drug use, the
reasons why drugs are harmful, and ways to resist
pressures to try drugs.
10. Use an understanding of the danger posed by alcohol and
other drugs to help other students avoid them. Encourage
other students to resist drugs, persuade those using drugs
to seek help, and report those selling drugs to parents
and the school principal.
COMMUNITIES:
11. Help schools fight drugs by providing them with the
expertise and financial resources of community groups and
agencies.
12. Involve local law enforcement agencies in all aspects of
drug prevention: assessment, enforcement, and education.
The police and courts should have well-established
relationships with the schools.
"I felt depressed and hurt all the time. I hated myself
for the way I hurt my parents and treated them so cruelly
and for the way I treated others. I hated myself the most,
though, for the way I treated myself. I would take drugs
until I overdosed, and fell further and further behind in
school and work and relationships with others. I just
didn't care anymore whether I lived or died. I stopped
going to school altogether .... I felt constantly
depressed and began having thoughts of suicide, which
scared me a lot! I didn't know where to turn..."
--Stewart, a high school student
CHILDREN AND DRUGS
When 13- to 18-year-olds were asked to name the biggest
problem facing young people today, drug use led the list. In
1987, 54 percent of teens cited drugs as their greatest
concern--up from 27 percent only 10 years earlier.
Eighty-nine percent of teens oppose legalization of
marijuana, and 77 percent believe it would be wrong to
decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana.
Drugs and alcohol rank high on the list of topics that
teens wish they could discuss more with their parents--42
percent want more discussions with parents about drugs, and 39
percent feel the need to talk about drinking.
--The Gallup Youth Surveys, 1987 and 1988
Adult's share this concern, ranking student drug use as
the most serious problem facing our nation's schools for the
third consecutive year.
--20th Annual Gallup Poll of the Public's Attitudes Toward
Public Schools, 1988
Children and Drugs
Americans have consistently identified drug use as being
among the top problems confronting the nation's schools. Yet
many do not recognize the degree to which their own children,
their own schools, and their own communities are at risk.
Research shows that drug use among children is 10 times
more prevalent than parents suspect. In addition, many students
know that their parents do not recognize the extent of drug
use; as a result, some young people believe that they can use
drugs with impunity.
School administrators and teachers often are unaware that
some of their students are using and selling drugs on school
property. As Ralph Egers, former superintendent of schools in
South Portland, Maine, put it, "We'd like to think that our
kids don't have this problem, but the brightest kid from the
best family in the community could have the problem."
The facts are:
* Drug use is not confined to young people in certain
geographic areas or from particular economic backgrounds;
drug use affects young people throughout the nation.
* Drugs are a serious problem not only among high school
students but among middle and elementary school students
as well.
* Heavy drinking, defined as five or more drinks on one
occasion, is reported by 30 percent of high school
seniors, and more than one-half are occasional users of
alcohol.
* All illegal drugs are dangerous; there is no such thing as
safe or responsible use of illegal drugs.
* Although drug trafficking is controlled by adults, the
immediate source of drugs for most students is other
students.
Continuing misconceptions about the drug problem stand in
the way of corrective action. The following section outlines
the nature and extent of the problem and summaries the latest
research on the effects of drugs on students and schools.
Figure 1
Percentage of 6th Graders Who Report Peer Pressure to Try Drugs
Source: 1987 Weekly Reader Survey on Drugs and Drinking
Figure 2
Percentage of High School Seniors Who Have Used Cocaine
Source: Institute for Social Research 1991
Extent of Alcohol and Other Drug Use
Drug use is widespread among American schoolchildren.
Although a national study of high school seniors in 1991 shows
that drug use among young people is declining, the figures
remain unacceptably high (see Figure 2). The United States
continues to have the highest rate of teenage drug use of any
nation in the industrialized world. Forty-four percent of high
school seniors have tried an illicit drug by the time they
graduate. Alcohol is the most widely used drug. By their senior
year, 88 percent of students in the class of 1991 had used
alcohol; 78 percent had used alcohol in the past year and 54
percent had used it in the month prior to the survey. Thirty
percent of seniors surveyed reported at least one occasion of
heavy drinking in the two weeks prior to the survey--an
occasion in which they had five or more drinks in a row.
Twenty-four percent of 1991 seniors reported using marijuana in
the past year, and 14 percent said they had used it at least
once in the previous month. Three and one-half percent of
seniors indicated that they had used cocaine in the past year.
Three percent of seniors had used crack, and 1.5 percent had
used it within the last year.
The drug problem affects all types of students. All
regions and all types of communities show high levels of drug
use. Thirty percent of 1990 high school seniors in
nonmetropolitan areas reported illicit drug use in the previous
year, while the rate for seniors in large metropolitan areas
was 33 percent. Although higher proportions of males are
involved in illicit drug use, especially heavy drug use, the
gap between the sexes is closing. The extent to which high
school seniors reported having used illicit drugs is higher for
whites than for blacks.
Initial use of alcohol and other drugs occurs at an
increasingly early age. Nineteen percent of seniors report they
had initiated cigarette use by sixth grade and 11 percent had
used alcohol. Forty-four percent of 8th graders have tried
cigarettes, and 70 percent have at least tried alcohol.
Twenty-seven percent of 8th graders have gotten drunk at least
once, and 13 percent report they have consumed five or more
drinks in a row. Of the illicit drugs, marijuana and inhalants
show the earliest pattern of initiation; about 2.8 percent of
seniors had begun using both of these substances by the 6th
grade. The peak initiation rate is reached by 9th grade. Peak
initiation rates for cocaine and hallucinogens are reached in
10th and 11th grade with the initiation rate for nearly all
drugs falling off by 12th grade.
Fact Sheet
Drugs and Dependence
Drugs cause physical and emotional dependence. Users may
develop a craving for specific drugs, and their bodies may
respond to the presence of drugs in ways that lead to increased
drug use.
* Regular users of drugs develop tolerance, a need to take
larger doses to get the same initial effect. They may
respond by combining drugs, frequently with devastating
results. Many teenage drug users calling a national
cocaine hotline report that they take other drugs just to
counteract the unpleasant effects of cocaine.
* Certain drugs, such as opiates, barbituates, alcohol, and
nicotine, create physical dependence. With prolonged use,
these drugs become part of the body chemistry. When a
regular user stops taking the drug, the body experiences
the physiological trauma known as withdrawal.
* Psychological dependence occurs when taking drugs becomes
the center of the user's life. Among children,
psychological dependence erodes school performance and can
destroy ties to family and friends, as well as cause the
child to abandon outside interests, values, and goals. The
child goes from taking drugs to feel good, to taking them
to keep from feeling bad. Over time, drug use itself
heightens the bad feelings and can leave the user
suicidal. More than half of all adolescent suicides are
drug-related.
* Drugs can remain in the body long after use has stopped.
The extent to which a drug is retained in the body depends
on the drug's chemical composition, that is, whether it is
fat-soluble. Fat-soluble drugs such as marijuana and
phencyclidine (PCP) seek out and settle in the fatty
tissues. As a result, they build up in the fatty parts of
the body such as the brain. Such accumulations of drugs
and their slow release over time may have effects on the
mind and body weeks or even months after drug use has
stopped.
How Drug Use Develops
Social influences play a key role in making drug use
attractive to children.
The first temptations to use drugs may come in social
situations in the form of pressures to "act grown up" by
smoking cigarettes or using alcohol or marijuana.
A 1987 Weekly Reader survey found that television and
movies had the greatest influence on fourth through sixth
graders in making drugs and alcohol seem attractive; the second
greatest influence was other children.
The survey offers insights into why students take drugs.
Children in grades four through six think that the most
important reason for using alcohol and marijuana is to "fit in
with others," followed closely by a desire "to feel older."
Students also have incomplete or inaccurate information. For
example, only 44 percent of sixth graders polled in a national
survey think alcohol should be called a drug. This finding
reinforces the need for prevention programs beginning in the
early grades--programs that focus on teaching children the
facts about drugs and alcohol and the skills to resist peer
pressure to use them.
Students who turn to more potent drugs usually do so after
first using cigarettes and alcohol, and then marijuana. Initial
attempts may not produce a "high"; however, students who
continue to use drugs learn that drugs can change their
thoughts and feelings. The greater a student's involvement with
marijuana, the more likely it is the student will begin to use
other drugs in conjunction with marijuana.
Drug use frequently progresses in stages--from occasional
use, to regular use, to multiple drug use, and ultimately to
total dependency. With each successive stage, drug use
intensifies, becomes more varied, and results in increasingly
debilitating effects.
But this progression is not inevitable. Drug use can be
stopped at any stage. However, the more deeply involved
children are with drugs, the more difficult it is for them to
stop. The best way to fight drug use is to begin prevention
efforts before children start using drugs. Prevention efforts
that focus on young children are the most effective means to
fight drug use.
Fact Sheet
Youth and Alcohol
Alcohol is the number one drug problem among youth. The
easy availability, widespread acceptability, and extensive
promotion of alcoholic beverages within our society make
alcohol the most widely used and abused drug.
* Alcohol use is widespread. By their senior year of high
school nearly 90 percent of students will have tried
alcoholic beverages. Despite a legal drinking age of 21,
junior and senior high school students drink 35 percent of
all wine coolers sold in the United States. They also
drink an estimated 1.1 billion bottles and cans of beer
each year.
* Drinking has acute effects on the body. The heavy,
fast-paced drinking that young people commonly engage in
quickly alters judgment, vision, coordination, and speech
and often leads to dangerous risk-taking behavior. Because
young people have lower body weight than adults, youth
absorb alcohol into their blood system faster than adults
and exhibit greater impairment for longer periods of time.
Alcohol use not only increases the likelihood of being
involved in an accident, it increases the risk of serious
injury in an accident because of its harmful effects on
numerous parts of the body.
* Alcohol-related highway accidents are the principal cause
of death among young people ages 15 through 24. Alcohol use
is the primary cause of traffic accidents involving teenage
drivers. Furthermore, about half of all youthful deaths in
drowning, fires, suicide, and homicide are alcohol-related.
* Any alcoholic beverage can be misused. Contrary to popular
belief, drinking beer or wine can have effects similar to
drinking "hard" liquor. A bottle of beer, a glass of wine,
or a bottle of wine cooler have about the same amount of
ethyl alcohol as a drink made with liquor. Those who drive
"under the influence" are most likely to have been drinking
beer.
* Early alcohol use is associated with subsequent alcohol
dependence and related health problems. Youth who use
alcohol at a younger age are more likely to use alcohol
heavily and to experience alcohol-related problems
affecting their relationships with family and friends by
late adolescence. Their school performance is likely to
suffer, and they are more likely to be truant. They are
also more likely to abuse other drugs and to get in trouble
with the law, or, if they are girls, to become pregnant.
Effects of Drug Use
The drugs students are taking today are more potent, more
dangerous, and more addictive than ever.
Adolescents are particularly vulnerable to the effects of
drugs. Drugs threaten normal development in a number of ways:
* Drugs can interfere with memory, sensation, and
perception. They distort experiences and cause a loss of
self-control that can lead users to harm themselves and
others.
* Drugs interfere with the brain's ability to take in, sort,
and synthesize information. As a result, sensory
information runs together, providing new sensations while
blocking normal ability to understand the information
received.
* Drugs can have an insidious effect on perception; for
example, cocaine and amphetamines often give users a false
sense of functioning at their best while on the drug.
Drug suppliers have responded to the increasing demand for
drugs by developing new strains, producing reprocessed,
purified drugs, and using underground laboratories to create
more powerful forms of illegal drugs. Consequently, users are
exposed to heightened or unknown levels of risk.
* The marijuana produced today is from 5 to 20 times
stronger than that available as recently as 10 years ago.
Regular use by adolescents has been associated with an
"amotivational syndrome," characterized by apathy and loss
of goals. Research has shown that severe psychological
damage, including paranoia and psychosis, can occur when
marijuana contains 2 percent THC, its major psychoactive
ingredient. Since the early 1980s, most marijuana has
contained from 4 to 6 percent THC-two or three times the
amount capable of causing serious damage.
* Crack is a purified and highly addictive form of cocaine.
* Phencyclidine (PCP), first developed as an animal
tranquilizer, has unpredictable and often violent effects.
Often children do not even know that they are using this
drug when PCP-laced parsley in cigarette form is passed
off as marijuana, or when PCP in crystal form is sold as
lysergic acid (LSD).
* Some of the "designer" drugs, slight chemical variations
of existing illegal drugs, have been known to cause
permanent brain damage with a single dose.
Further information about drugs is presented in the
Resources Section, pages 61-71.
Fact Sheet
Cocaine: Crack
Cocaine is readily available. Fifty-one percent of seniors
say it would be easy for them to get cocaine. Most alarming is
the ready availability of cocaine in a cheap but potent form
called crack or rock. Crack is a purified form of cocaine that
is smoked.
* Crack is inexpensive to try. Crack is available for as
little as $5. As a result, the drug is affordable to many
potential users, including high school and even elementary
school students.
* Crack is easy to use. It is sold in pieces resembling
small white gravel or soap chips and is sometimes pressed
into small pellets. Crack can be smoked in a pipe or put
into a cigarette. The visible effects disappear within
minutes after smoking, so detection is difficult.
* Crack is extremely addictive. Crack is far more addictive
than heroin or barbiturates. Because crack is smoked, it
is quickly absorbed into the blood stream. It produces a
feeling of extreme euphoria, peaking within seconds.
Repeated use of crack can lead to addiction within a few
days.
* Crack leads to crime and severe psychological disorders.
Many youths, once addicted, have turned to stealing,
prostitution, and drug dealing in order to support their
habit. Continued use can produce violent behavior and
psychotic states similar to schizophrenia.
* Crack is deadly. Cocaine in any form, including crack, can
cause sudden death from cardiac arrest or respiratory
failure.
Drug Use and Learning
Drugs erode the self-discipline and motivation necessary
for learning. Pervasive drug use among students creates a
climate in the schools that is destructive to learning.
Research shows that drug use can cause a decline in
academic performance. This has been found to be true for
students who excelled in school prior to drug use as well as
for those with academic or behavioral problems prior to use.
According to one study, students using marijuana were twice as
likely to average D's and F's as other students. The decline in
grades often reverses when drug use is stopped.
Drug use is closely tied to being truant and dropping out
of school. High school seniors who are heavy drug users are
more than three times as likely to skip school as nonusers.
About one-fifth of heavy users skipped three or more school
days a month, more than six times the truancy rate of nonusers.
In a Philadelphia study, dropouts were almost twice as likely
to be frequent drug users as were high school graduates; four
in five dropouts used drugs regularly.
Drug use is associated with crime and misconduct that
disrupt the maintenance of an orderly and safe school
atmosphere conducive to learning. Drugs not only transform
schools into marketplaces for dope deals, they also lead to the
destruction of property and to classroom disorder. Among high
school seniors, heavy drug users were more than three times as
likely to vandalize school property and twice as likely to have
been involved in a fight at school or at work as nonusers.
Students on drugs create a climate of apathy, disruption, and
disrespect for others. For example, among teenage callers to a
national cocaine hotline, 32 percent reported that they sold
drugs, and 64 percent said that they stole from family,
friends, or employers to buy drugs. A drug-ridden environment
is a strong deterrent to learning not only for drug users but
for other students as well.
A PLAN FOR ACTION
To combat student drug use most effectively, the entire
community must be involved: parents, schools, students, law
enforcement authorities, religious groups, social service
agencies, and the media. They all must transmit a single
consistent message that drug use is wrong and dangerous, and it
will not be tolerated. This message must be reinforced through
strong, consistent law enforcement and disciplinary measures.
The following recommendations and examples describe
actions that can be taken by parents, schools, students, and
communities to stop drug use. These recommendations are derived
from research and from the experiences of schools throughout
the country. They show that the drug problem can be overcome.
WHAT PARENTS CAN DO
* Teach standards of right and wrong, and demonstrate these
standards through personal example.
* Help children to resist peer pressure to use alcohol and
other drugs by supervising their activities, knowing who
their friends are, and talking with them about their
interests and problems.
* Be knowledgeable about drugs and signs of drug use. When
symptoms are observed, respond promptly.
Parents
Instilling Responsibility
Recommendation #1:
Teach standards of right and wrong and demonstrate these
standards through personal example.
Children who are brought up to value individual
responsibility and self-discipline and to have a clear sense of
right and wrong are less likely to try drugs than those who are
not. Parents can help to instill these values by:
* Setting a good example for children and not using drugs
themselves.
* Explaining to their children at an early age that drug use
is wrong, harmful, and unlawful, and reinforcing this
teaching throughout adolescence.
* Encouraging self-discipline by giving children regular
duties and holding them accountable for their actions.
* Establishing standards of behavior concerning drugs,
drinking, dating, curfews, and unsupervised activities,
and enforcing them consistently and fairly.
* Encouraging their children to stand by their convictions
when pressured to use drugs.
Central Elementary
Gulfport, Mississippi
Every afternoon after the last bell rings, the POP
(Parents on Patrol) Team springs into action. With their
T-shirts proclaiming "Drug-Free Body" and whistles at the
ready, their mission is to ensure that all children get off the
school grounds and on their way home safely. POPs are also
posted several blocks away from campus. They send a strong
signal to any dealers and drug users who may be in the
neighborhood (which has the highest rate of drug-related crime
in Gulfport), that these children have higher goals, healthier
aspirations.
The POP team is just one way parents are involved in the
drug prevention program at Central Elementary. Spurred, in
part, by the high rate of drug activity in the school's
surrounding neighborhood, the Central staff made an early
commitment to involving parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles
and other caregivers in all aspects of the program's
development.
The school helped train parents to go into the
community--to churches and social centers--to teach drug
awareness and provide child rearing classes. Newsletters and
home visits support Central's outreach.
Inherent in the school's drug prevention program is the
philosophy that the best prevention is providing healthy,
challenging activities for the mind. High on Checkers is just
one such program. Central checker players not only compete
within the school, they take field trips to the "checker
capital of the world" 70 miles from Gulfport. Central champions
have even played in tournaments in Russia and England. Parent
volunteers make travel possible by seeking donations, holding
fund-raising events, and serving as chaperons.
Teachers and parents also devote time and energy to other
activities such as the highly acclaimed Boys Choir, a
problem-solving club called the Think Tank, and the Central
Student Council, one of the few elementary councils in
Mississippi.
Parents may also volunteer to read to students, to help
with the physical education program, or to be a "buddy" in the
cafeteria. Several parents have acknowledged that the Central
drug-free efforts have made a positive difference not only in
the lives of their children, but in their own lives as well.
Parents
Supervising Activities
Recommendation #2:
Help children to resist peer pressure to use alcohol and
other drugs by supervising their activities, knowing who their
friends are, and talking with them about their interests and
problems.
When parents take an active interest in their children's
behavior, they provide the guidance and support children need
to resist drugs. Parents can do this by:
* Knowing their children's whereabouts, activities, and
friends.
* Working to maintain and improve family communications and
listening to their children.
* Being able to discuss drugs knowledgeably. It is far
better for children to obtain their information from their
parents than from their peers or on the street.
* Communicating regularly with the parents of their
children's friends and sharing their knowledge about drugs
with other parents.
* Being selective about their children's viewing of
television and movies that portray drug use as glamorous
or exciting.
In addition, parents can work with the school in its
efforts to fight drugs by:
* Encouraging the development of a school policy with a
clear no-use message.
* Supporting administrators who are tough on drugs.
* Assisting the school in monitoring students' attendance
and planning and chaperoning school-sponsored activities.
* Communicating regularly with the school regarding their
children's behavior.
Fact Sheet
Signs of Drug Use
Changing patterns of performance, appearance, and behavior
may signal use of drugs. The items in the first category listed
below provide direct evidence of drug use; the items in the
other categories offer signs that may indicate drug use. Adults
should watch for extreme changes in children's behavior,
changes that together form a pattern associated with drug use.
Signs of Drugs and Drug Paraphernalia
* Possession of drug-related paraphernalia such as pipes,
rolling papers, small decongestant bottles, eye drops, or
small butane torches.
* Possession of drugs or evidence of drugs, such as pills,
white powder, small glass vials, or hypodermic needles;
peculiar plants or butts, seeds, or leaves in ashtrays or
in clothing pockets.
* Odor of drugs, smell of incense or other "cover-up"
scents.
Identification with Drug Culture
* Drug-related magazines, slogans on clothing.
* Conversation and jokes that are preoccupied with drugs.
* Hostility in discussing drugs.
* Collection of beer cans.
Signs of Physical Deterioration
* Memory lapses, short attention span, difficulty in
concentration.
* Poor physical coordination, slurred or incoherent speech.
* Unhealthy appearance, indifference to hygiene and grooming.
* Bloodshot eyes, dilated pupils.
Dramatic Changes in School Performance
* Marked downturn in student's grades--not just from C's to
F's, but from A's to B's and C's; assignments not
completed.
* Increased absenteeism or tardiness.
Changes in Behavior
* Chronic dishonesty (lying, stealing, cheating); trouble
with the police.
* Changes in friends, evasiveness in talking about new ones.
* Possession of large amounts of money.
* Increasing and inappropriate anger, hostility,
irritability, secretiveness.
* Reduced motivation, energy, self-discipline, self-esteem.
* Diminished interest in extracurricular activities and
hobbies.
Parents
Recognizing Drug Use
Recommendation #3:
Be knowledgeable about drugs and signs of drug use. When
symptoms are observed, respond promptly.
Parents are in the best position to recognize early signs
of drug use in their children. To inform and involve
themselves, parents should take the following steps:
* Learn about the extent of the drug problem in their
community and in their children's schools.
* Learn how to recognize signs of drug use.
* Meet with parents of their children's friends or
classmates about the drug problem at their school.
Establish a means of sharing information to determine
which children are using drugs and who is supplying them.
Parents who suspect their children are using drugs often
must deal with their own emotions of anger, resentment, and
guilt. Frequently they deny the evidence and postpone
confronting their children. Yet, the earlier a drug problem is
detected and faced, the less difficult it is to overcome. If
parents suspect that their children are using drugs, they
should take the following steps:
* Devise a plan of action. Consult with school officials and
other parents.
* Discuss their suspicions with their children in a calm,
objective manner. Do not confront a child while he or she
is under the influence of alcohol or other drugs.
* Impose disciplinary measures that help remove the child
from those circumstances where drug use might occur.
* Seek advice and assistance from drug treatment
professionals and from a parent group. (For further
information, consult the Resources Section, pages 61-81.)
WHAT SCHOOLS CAN DO
* Determine the extent and character of alcohol and other
drug use and monitor that use regularly.
* Establish clear and specific rules regarding alcohol and
other drug use that include strong corrective actions.
* Enforce established policies against alcohol and other
drug use fairly and consistently. Ensure adequate security
measures to eliminate drugs from school premises and
school functions.
* Implement a comprehensive drug prevention curriculum for
kindergarten through grade 12, teaching that drug use is
wrong and harmful, and supporting and strengthening
resistance to drugs.
* Reach out to the community for support and assistance in
making the school's anti-drug policy and program work.
Develop collaborative arrangements in which school
personnel, parents, school boards, law enforcement
officers, treatment organizations, and private groups can
work together to provide necessary resources.
Schools
Assessing the Problem
Recommendation #4:
Determine the extent and character of alcohol and other
drug use and monitor that use regularly.
School personnel should be informed about the extent of
drugs in their school. School boards, superintendents, and
local public officials should support school administrators in
their efforts to assess the extent of the drug problem and to
combat it.
To guide and evaluate effective drug prevention efforts,
schools need to take the following actions:
* Conduct anonymous surveys of students and school personnel
and consult with local law enforcement officials to
identify the extent of the drug problem.
* Bring together school personnel to identify areas where
drugs are being used and sold.
* Meet with parents to help determine the nature and extent
of drug use.
* Maintain records on drug use and sale in the school over
time, for use in evaluating and improving prevention
efforts. In addition to self-reported drug use patterns,
records may include information on drug-related arrests
and school discipline problems.
* Inform the community, in straightforward language, of the
results of the school's assessment of the drug problem.
Roncalli High School
Manitowoc, Wisconsin
Before Roncalli, a Catholic coed high school, initiated
its no-use drug policy in the early 1980s, it was not uncommon
after athletic events to see a parking lot full of empty beer
cans and to hear reports of students charged with driving while
intoxicated.
After an alcohol-related teenage traffic fatality jolted
the community, a district-wide survey was taken that showed
widespread drug and alcohol use by high school students. The
Roncalli student body was no exception. In response, an action
plan was developed by students, parents, and the community that
calls for referral and treatment on the first offense for any
student found in the possession of or under the influence of
alcohol or drugs at any Roncalli High School activity. The
consequence for a second offense is dismissal.
Since this program's inception 13 years ago, only one
student has declined referral and treatment choosing instead to
leave school. Tracking surveys each year help the faculty and
students to monitor progress in achieving the school's
drug-free goal.
Positive peer pressure and team spirit are important
ingredients in Roncalli's anti-drug program. The student group
RADD (Roncalli Against Drinking and Drugs) operates as an arm
of the Student Senate to organize and coordinate drug-free
activities through the year. More than 90 percent of the 650
students at Roncalli High participate in RADD's activities that
include dances, open gym, Trivial Pursuit contests, Pictionary
night, video screenings, and other after-school events.
A Peer Helpers program matches all 120 incoming freshmen
with peers who provide information throughout the year on
Roncalli's anti-drug policies and program.
Concerned Persons Groups also meet at Roncalli to offer
extra peer support to students who have a friend or family
member using drugs or who may need a place to talk and find
assistance in confidence. The groups meet during the school day
on alternating schedules so that all may have the option to
attend.
Parents, too, are actively involved in the school program.
The Roncalli Parents Communication Network has commitments from
more than 60 percent of the Roncalli parents to keep their
homes drug-free and to be present when students visit.
Schools
Setting Policy
Recommendation #5:
Establish clear and specific rules regarding alcohol and
other drug use that include strong corrective actions.
School policies should clearly establish that drug use,
possession, and sale on the school grounds and at school
functions will not be tolerated. These policies should apply
both to students and to school personnel, and may include
prevention, intervention, treatment, and disciplinary measures.
School policies should have the following characteristics:
* Specify what constitutes a drug offense by defining (1)
illegal substances and paraphernalia; (2) the area of the
school's jurisdiction, for example, the school property,
its surroundings, and all school-related events, such as
proms and football games; and (3) the types of violations
(drug possession, use, and sale).
* State the consequences for violating school policy;
punitive action should be linked to referral for treatment
and counseling. Measures that schools have found effective
in dealing with first-time offenders include the
following:
-- A required meeting of parents and the student with
school officials, concluding with a contract signed by
the student and parents in which they both acknowledge
a rug problem and the student agrees to stop using and
to participate in drug counseling or a rehabilitation
program.
-- Suspension, assignment to an alternative school,
in-school suspension, after-school or Saturday
detention with close supervision, and demanding
academic assignments.
-- Referral to a drug treatment expert or counselor.
-- Notification of police.
Penalties for repeat offenders and for sellers may include
expulsion, legal action, and referral for treatment.
* Describe procedures for handling violations, including the
following:
-- Legal issues associated with disciplinary actions
(confidentiality, due process, and search and seizure)
and their application.
-- Circumstances under which incidents should be reported
and the responsibilities and procedures for reporting
incidents, including the identification of the
authorities to be contacted.
-- Procedures for notifying parents when their child is
suspected of using drugs or is caught with drugs.
-- Procedures for notifying police.
* Enlist legal counsel to ensure that all policy is in
compliance with applicable Federal, State, and local laws.
* Build community support for the policy. Hold open meetings
where views can be aired and differences resolved.
Schools
Enforcing Policy
Recommendation #6:
Enforce established policies against alcohol and other
drug use fairly and consistently. Ensure adequate security
measures to eliminate drugs from school premises and school
functions.
Ensure that everyone understands the policy and the
procedures that will be followed in case of infractions. Make
copies of the school policy available to all parents, teachers,
and students, and publicize the policy throughout the school
and community.
Impose strict security measures to bar access to intruders
and to prohibit student drug trafficking. Enforcement policies
should correspond to the severity of the school's drug problem.
For example:
* Officials can require students to carry hall passes,
supervise school grounds and hallways, and secure
assistance of law enforcement officials, particularly to
help monitor areas around the school.
* For a severe drug problem, officials can use security
personnel to monitor closely all school areas where drug
sales and use are known to occur; issue mandatory
identification badges for school staff and students;
request the assistance of local police to help stop drug
dealing; and, depending on applicable law, develop a
policy that permits periodic searches of student lockers.
Review enforcement practices regularly to ensure that
penalties are uniformly and fairly applied.
* Consider implementing an alternative program for students
who have been suspended for drug use or possession. Some
districts have developed off-campus programs to enable
suspended students to continue their education in a more
tightly structured environment. These programs may be
offered during the day or in the evening, and may offer
counseling as well as an academic curriculum. Other
districts have successfully used a probationary
alternative that combined a short-term in-school
suspension with requirements for drug testing and
participation in support groups as a condition of
returning to the classroom.
Lawrenceville Middle School
Lawrenceville, Georgia
Ten years ago, Lawrenceville, Georgia, was a rural
community outside Atlanta. Today it is a full-fledged suburb,
and one of the nation's fastest-growing. Lawrenceville Middle
School, responding to rapid changes in the community, did not
wait for a crisis to begin thinking about the drug education
needs of its 1100 students. It conducted a survey in 1981 to
use as a benchmark to measure drug-free progress in subsequent
years and to help define an appropriate program--the first in
Gwinnett County--for sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders.
The Lawrenceville program emphasizes five prevention
strategies: education, life and social skills, healthy
alternatives, risk factor reduction, and environmental change.
While annual surveys help the faculty and parents assess its
effectiveness, they are not the only way they measure
effectiveness. Regular informal assessments and day-today
faculty observation help to fine tune the program from year to
year and suggest any immediate changes required. A case in
point: when teachers began to observe an increase in tobacco
use, particularly smokeless tobacco use, they formed a
committee that included parents and administrators and came up
with a plan to include more information in the curriculum on
the harmful effects of tobacco and more up-to-date materials in
the media center. They also decided to implement a no-tobacco
use policy for the school staff. The following year, incidents
of student tobacco use decreased dramatically.
Parents, students, and teachers attribute much of
Lawrenceville's drug education success to its alternative
program, STRIDE, (Student/Teacher Resource Institute for Drug
Education), a unique concept that has captured the
attention--and drug-free pledges--of more than 80 percent of
Lawrenceville's students.
STRIDE's leadership team--composed of seventh-and
eighth-graders-meets during the summer to plan activities for
the upcoming year. A program featuring 10 to 12 major events is
outlined at the summer planning session. STRIDE leaders meet
regularly during the school year to implement the program and
delegate responsibilities. STRIDE events--held after school
from 2:00 to 5:00--are widely publicized by STRIDE members.
Events include programs by visiting athletes who qualify as
role models, dances, videos, plays, speakers from the
community, and special sports events.
Schools
Teaching About Drug Prevention
Recommendation # 7:
Implement a comprehensive drug prevention curriculum for
kindergarten through grade 12, teaching that drug use is wrong
and harmful, and supporting and strengthening resistance to
drugs.
A model program would have these main objectives:
* To value and maintain sound personal health.
* To respect laws and rules prohibiting drugs.
* To resist pressures to use drugs.
* To promote student activities that are drug free and offer
healthy avenues for student interests.
In developing a program, school staff should take the
following steps:
* Determine curriculum content appropriate for the school's
drug problem and grade levels.
* Base the curriculum on an understanding of why children
try drugs in order to teach them how to resist pressures
to use drugs.
* Review existing materials for possible adaptation. State
and national organizations--and some lending
libraries--that have an interest in drug prevention make
available lists of materials.
In implementing a program, school staff should take the
following steps:
* Include students in all grades. Effective drug education
is cumulative.
* Teach about drugs in health education classes, and
reinforce this curriculum with appropriate materials in
classes such as social studies and science.
* Develop expertise in drug prevention through training.
Teachers should be knowledgeable about drugs, personally
committed to opposing drug use, and skilled at eliciting
participation by students in drug prevention efforts.
(For more detailed information on topics and learning
activities to incorporate in a drug prevention program, see
pages 44-49.)
Fact Sheet
Tips for Selecting Drug Prevention Materials
In evaluating drug prevention materials, keep the
following points in mind:
Check the date of publication. Material published before
1980 may be outdated; even recently published materials may be
inaccurate.
Look for "warning flag" phrases and concepts. The
following expressions, many of which appear frequently in
"pro-drug" material, falsely imply that there is a "safe" use
of mind-altering drugs: experimental use, recreational use,
social use, controlled use, responsible use, use/abuse.
Mood-altering is a deceptive euphemism for mind-altering.
The implication of the phrase mood-altering is that only
temporary feelings are involved. The fact is that mood
changes are biological changes in the brain.
"There are no 'good' or 'bad' drugs, just improper use."
This is a popular semantic camouflage in pro-drug
literature. It confuses young people and minimizes the
distinct chemical differences among substances.
"The child's own decision."
Parents cannot afford to leave such hazardous choices to
their children. It is the parents' responsibility to do
all in their power to provide the information and the
protection to assure their children a drug-free childhood
and adolescence.
Be alert for contradictory messages. Many authors give a
pro-drug message and then cover their tracks by including
"cautions" about how to use drugs.
Make certain that the health consequences revealed in
current research are adequately described. Literature should
make these facts clear: The high potency of marijuana on the
market today makes it more dangerous than ever. THC, a
psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, is fat-soluble, and its
accumulation in the body has many adverse biological effects.
Cocaine can cause death and is one of the most addictive drugs
known. It takes less alcohol to produce impairment in youths
than in adults.
Demand material that sets positive standards of behavior
for children. The message conveyed must be an expectation that
children can say no to drugs. The publication and its message
must provide the information and must support family
involvement to reinforce the child's courage to stay drug free.
A fuller discussion of curriculum selection is offered in
Drug Prevention Curricula: A Guide to Selection and
Implementation. The guide is published by the U.S. Department
of Education and is available from the National Clearinghouse
for Alcohol and Drug Information, Box 2345 Rockville MD 20852.
Schools
Enlisting the Community's Help
Recommendation #8:
Reach out to the community for support and assistance in
making the school's anti-drug policy and program work. Develop
collaborative arrangements in which school personnel, parents,
school boards, law enforcement officers, treatment
organizations, and private groups can work together to provide
necessary resources.
School officials should recognize that they cannot solve
the drug problem by themselves. They need to enlist the
community's support for their efforts by taking the following
actions:
* Increase community understanding of the problem through
meetings, media coverage, and education programs.
* Build public support for the policy; develop agreement on
the goals of a school drug policy, including prevention
and enforcement goals.
* Educate the community about the effects and extent of the
drug problem.
* Strengthen contacts with law enforcement agencies through
discussions about the school's specific drug problems and
ways they can assist in drug education and enforcement.
* Call on local professionals, such as physicians and
pharmacists, to share their expertise on drug abuse as
class lecturers.
* Mobilize the resources of community groups and local
businesses to support the program.
Fact Sheet
Legal Questions on Search and Seizure
In 1985, the Supreme Court for the first time analyzed the
application in the public school setting of the Fourth
Amendment prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures.
The Court sought to craft a rule that would balance the need of
school authorities to maintain order and the privacy rights of
students. The questions in this section summarize the decisions
of the Supreme Court and of lower Federal courts. School
officials should consult with legal counsel in formulating
their policies.
What legal standard applies to school officials who search
students and their possessions for drugs?
The Supreme Court has held that school officials may
institute a search if there are "reasonable grounds" to
believe that the search will reveal evidence that the
student has violated or is violating either the law or the
rules of the school.
Do school officials need a search warrant to conduct a search
for drugs?
No, not if they are carrying out the search independent of
the police and other law enforcement officials. A more
stringent legal standard may apply if law enforcement
officials are involved in the search.
How extensive can a search be?
The scope of the permissible search will depend on whether
the measures used during the search are reasonably related
to the purpose of the search and are not excessively
intrusive in light of the age and sex of the student being
searched. The more intrusive the search, the greater the
justification that will be required by the courts.
Do school officials have to stop a search when they find the
object of the search?
Not necessarily. If a search reveals items suggesting the
presence of other evidence of crime or misconduct, the
school official may continue the search. For example, if a
teacher is justifiably searching a student's purse for
cigarettes and finds rolling papers, it will be reasonable
(subject to any local policy to the contrary) for the
teacher to search the rest of the purse for evidence of
drugs.
Can school officials search student lockers?
Reasonable grounds to believe that a particular student
locker contains evidence of a violation of the law or
school rules will generally justify a search of that
locker. In addition, some courts have upheld written
school policies that authorize school officials to inspect
student lockers at any time.
(For a more detailed discussion of legal issues, see pages
50-60).
Fact Sheet
Legal Questions on Suspension and Expulsion
The following questions and answers briefly describe
several Federal requirements that apply to the use of
suspension and expulsion as disciplinary tools in public
schools. These may not reflect all laws, policies, and judicial
precedents applicable to any given school district. School
officials should consult with legal counsel to determine the
application of these laws in their schools and to ensure
compliance with all legal requirements.
What Federal procedural requirements apply to suspension or
expulsion?
* The Supreme Court has held that students facing suspension
or expulsion from school are entitled under the U.S.
Constitution to the basic due process protections of
notice and an opportunity to be heard. The nature and
formality of the "hearing" to be provided depend on the
severity of the sanction being imposed.
* A formal hearing is not required when a school seeks to
suspend a student for 10 days or less. Due process in that
situation requires only that:
-- the school inform the student, either orally or in
writing, of the charges and of the evidence to support
those charges.
-- the school give the student an opportunity to deny the
charges and present his or her side of the story.
-- as a general rule, the notice to the student and a
rudimentary hearing should precede a suspension unless
a student's presence poses a continuing danger to
persons or property or threatens to disrupt the
academic process. In such cases, the notice and
rudimentary hearing should follow as soon as possible
after the student's removal.
More formal procedures may be required for suspensions
longer than 10 days and for expulsions. In addition, Federal
law and regulations establish special rules governing
suspensions and expulsions of students with disabilities.
* States and local school districts may require additional
procedures.
Can students be suspended or expelled from school for use,
possession, or sale of drugs?
Generally, yes. A school may suspend or expel students in
accordance with the terms of its discipline policy. A
school policy may provide for penalties of varying
severity, including suspension or expulsion, to respond to
drug-related offenses. It is helpful to be explicit about
the types of offenses that will be punished and about the
penalties that may be imposed for particular types of
offenses (e.g., use, possession, or sale of drugs).
Generally, State and local law will determine the range of
sanctions permitted.
(For a more detailed discussion of legal issues, see pages
50-60.)
WHAT STUDENTS CAN DO
* Learn about the effects of drug use, the reasons why drugs
are harmful, and ways to resist pressures to try drugs.
* Use an understanding of the danger posed by drugs to help
other students avoid them. Encourage other students to
resist drugs, persuade those using drugs to seek help, and
report those selling drugs to parents and the school
principal.
Students
Learning the Facts
Recommendation #9:
Learn about the effects of alcohol and other drug use, the
reasons why drugs are harmful, and ways to resist pressures to
try drugs. Students can arm themselves with the knowledge to
resist drug use in the following ways:
* Learning about the effects and risks of drugs.
* Learning the symptoms of drug use and the names of
organizations and individuals available to help when
friends or family members are in trouble.
* Understanding the pressures to use drugs and ways to
counteract
* Knowing the school rules on drugs and ways to help make
the school policy work.
* Knowing the school procedures for reporting drug offenses.
* Knowing the laws on drug use and the penalties--for
example, for driving under the influence of alcohol or
other drugs--and understanding how the laws protect
individuals and society.
* Developing skill in communicating their opposition to
drugs and their resolve to avoid drug use.
R.H. Watkins High School of Jones County, Mississippi, has
developed this pledge setting forth the duties and
responsibilities of student counselors in its peer
counseling program.
Responsibility Pledge for a Peer Counselor
R.H. Watkins High School
As a drug education peer counselor you have the
opportunity to help the youth of our community develop to their
full potential without the interference of illegal drug use. It
is a responsibility you must not take lightly. Therefore,
please read the following responsibilities you will be expected
to fulfill next school year and discuss them with your parents
or guardians.
Responsibilities of a Peer Counselor
* Understand and be able to clearly state your beliefs and
attitudes about drug use among teens and adults.
* Remain drug free.
* Maintain an average of C or better in all classes.
* Maintain a citizenship average of B or better.
* Participate in some club or extracurricular activity that
emphasizes the positive side of school life.
* Successfully complete training for the program, including,
for example, units on the identification and symptoms of
drug abuse, history and reasons for drug abuse, and the
legal/economic aspects of drug abuse.
* Successfully present monthly programs on drug abuse in
each of the elementary and junior high schools of the
Laurel City school system, and to community groups,
churches, and statewide groups as needed.
* Participate in rap sessions or individual counseling
sessions with Laurel City school students.
* Attend at least one Jones County Drug Council meeting per
year, attend the annual Drug Council Awards Banquet, work
in the Drug Council Fair exhibit and in any Drug Council
workshops, if needed.
* Grades and credit for Drug Education will be awarded on
successful completion of and participation in all the
above-stated activities.
________________________ ____________________________
Student's Signature Parent's or Guardian's Signature
Students
Helping to Fight Drug Use
Recommendation # 10:
Use an understanding of the danger posed by alcohol and
other drugs to help other students avoid them. Encourage other
students to resist drugs, persuade those using drugs to seek
help, and report those selling drugs to parents and the school
principal.
Although students are the primary victims of drug use in
the schools, drug use cannot be stopped or prevented unless
students actively participate in this effort.
Students can help fight alcohol and other drug use in the
following ways:
* Participating in discussions about the extent of the
problem at their own school.
* Supporting a strong school anti-drug policy and firm,
consistent enforcement of rules.
* Setting a positive example for fellow students and
speaking forcefully against drug use.
* Teaching other students, particularly younger ones, about
the harmful effects of drugs.
* Encouraging their parents to join with other parents to
promote a drug-free environment outside school. Some
successful parent groups have been started as a result of
the pressure of a son or daughter was concerned about
drugs.
* Becoming actively involved in efforts to inform the
community about the drug problem.
* Joining in or starting a club or other activity to create
positive, challenging ways for young people to have fun
without alcohol and other drugs. Obtaining adult
sponsorship for the group and publicizing its activities.
* Encouraging friends who have a drug problem to seek help
and reporting persons selling drugs to parents and the
principal.
WHAT COMMUNITIES CAN DO
* Help schools fight drugs by providing them with the
expertise and financial resources of community groups and
agencies.
* Involve local law enforcement agencies in all aspects of
drug prevention: assessment, enforcement, and education.
The police and courts should have well-established
relationships with the schools.
Communities
Providing Support
Recommendation # 11:
Help schools fight drugs by providing them with the
expertise and financial resources of community groups and
agencies.
Law enforcement agencies and the courts can take the
following actions:
* Provide volunteers to speak in the schools about the legal
ramifications of alcohol and other drug use. Officers can
encourage students to cooperate with them to stop drug
use.
* Meet with school officials to discuss alcohol and other
drug use in the school, share information on the drug
problem outside the school, and help school officials in
their investigations.
Social service and health agencies can take the following
actions:
* Provide volunteers to speak in the school about the
effects of drugs.
* Meet with parents to discuss symptoms of drug use and to
inform them about counseling resources.
* Provide the schools with health professionals to evaluate
students who may be potential drug users.
* Provide referrals to local treatment programs for students
who are using drugs.
* Establish and conduct drug counseling and support groups
for students.
Business leaders can take the following actions:
* Speak in the schools about the effects of alcohol and
other drug use on employment.
* Provide incentives for students who participate in drug
prevention programs and lead drug-free lives.
* Help schools obtain curriculum materials for their drug
prevention program.
* Sponsor drug-free activities for young people.
Parent groups can take the following actions:
* Mobilize others through informal discussions, door-to-door
canvassing, and school meetings to ensure that students
get a consistent no-drug message at home, at school, and
in the community.
* Contribute volunteers to chaperone student parties and
other activities.
Print and broadcast media can take the following actions:
* Educate the community about the nature of the drug problem
in their schools.
* Publicize school efforts to combat the problem.
Project DARE
Los Angeles, California
A collaborative effort begun in 1983 by the Los Angeles
Police Department and the Los Angeles Unified School District,
Project DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) uses uniformed
law enforcement officers in classrooms as regular instructors.
DARE officers use a drug curriculum that teaches students
resistance to peer pressure to use drugs, self-management
skills, and alternatives to drug use.
DARE reaches all Los Angeles Unified School District
students from kindergarten through junior high school. DARE has
also spread outside Los Angeles--police officers from 48 States
and 1100 police agencies have received DARE training. The DARE
program is also being used by the Department of Defense
Dependents' Schools (military police serve as instructors) and
at Bureau of Indian Affairs Schools (BIA police officers serve
as instructors).
In addition to providing classroom instruction, the
program arranges teacher orientation, officer-student
interaction (on playgrounds and in cafeterias, for example),
and a parent education evening at which DARE officers explain
the program to parents and provide information about symptoms
of drug use and ways to increase family communication.
Studies have shown that DARE has improved students'
attitudes about themselves, increased their sense of
responsibility for themselves and to police, and strengthened
their resistance to drugs. For example, before the DARE program
began, 51 percent of fifth grade students equated drug use with
having more friends. After training, only 8 percent reported
this attitude.
DARE's parent program has also changed attitudes. Before
DARE training, 61 percent of parents thought that there was
nothing parents could do about their children's use of drugs;
only 5 percent reported this opinion after the program. Before
DARE training, 32 percent of parents thought that it was all
right for children to drink alcohol at a party as long as
adults were present. After DARE, no parents reported such a
view.
Communities
Involving Law Enforcement
Recommendation # 12:
Involve local law enforcement agencies in all aspects of
drug prevention: assessment, enforcement, and education. The
police and courts should have well-established relationships
with the schools.
Community groups can take the following actions:
* Support school officials who take a strong position
against alcohol and other drug use.
* Support State and local policies to keep drugs and drug
paraphernalia away from schoolchildren.
* Build a community consensus in favor of strong penalties
for persons convicted of selling drugs, particularly for
adults who have sold drugs to children.
* Encourage programs to provide treatment to juvenile
first-offenders while maintaining tough penalties for
repeat offenders and drug sellers.
Law enforcement agencies, in cooperation with schools, can
take the following actions:
* Establish the procedures each will follow in school drug
cases.
* Provide expert personnel to participate in prevention
activities from kindergarten through grade 12.
* Secure areas around schools and see that the sale and use
of drugs are stopped.
* Provide advice and personnel to help improve security in
the school or on school premises.
Lincoln Junior High
Washington, D.C.
Abraham Lincoln Junior High is a modern school located in
an innercity neighborhood. Its ethnically diverse student body
has 700 students, representing more than 30 counties. The
student population is 51 percent black and 43 percent Hispanic.
Many of the students coming to Lincoln for the first time are
newly arrived immigrants from war-torn countries.
Many of these newly arrived students are eager for
acceptance by their new peers and just as eager to adjust to
American culture. Teachers are keenly aware of the students'
desire to fit in and realize that it is important to let these
children know that the majority of American children do not use
drugs nor is drug use an accepted behavior. This is not an easy
task for the teachers to accomplish since the rampant drug
activity going on in their neighborhood may suggest otherwise.
Lincoln's faculty-sponsored clubs are an important way
teachers support what they want the drug education program to
accomplish. To participate in any club, members must pledge to
be drug free. Two clubs are designed to develop confidence and
reinforce social and citizenship skills. Other clubs target
special interests such as the Lincoln Chess Club and LatiNegro,
a student arts group. A summer Substance Abuse Prevention
Education Camp involves nearly 100 students in activities
ranging from volley ball to dance to field trips.
The staff also encourages students to help each other. The
Peer Helper Club, whose members are trained in substance abuse
prevention and leadership skills, publishes a handbook
dispensing advice and a magazine, Cuidando Nuestra Juventud
(Taking Care of Our Youth), to which the entire student body
can contribute.
Another innovative way the school gets its message across
is by having the Student Response Team (SRT). This team is
comprised of ninth graders trained to become mediators. They
advertise their services within the school and get referrals
from students and teachers. Students who use the services of
the SRT must agree in advance to abide by the result of the
mediation process or be expelled from school. Mediators meet
with students in conflict at lunch or are called from class if
the matter is urgent. This multiracial team has been effective
in reducing violence and convincing peers that they don't have
to go to the streets to settle disputes.
CONCLUSION
Drugs threaten our children's lives, disrupt our schools,
shatter families, and, in some areas, shatter communities.
Drug-related crimes overwhelm our courts, social agencies, and
police. This situation need not and must not continue.
Across the United States, schools and communities have
found ways to turn the tide in the battle against drugs. The
methods they have used and the actions they have taken are
described in this volume. We know what works. We know that drug
use can be stopped.
But we cannot expect the schools to do the job without the
help of parents, police, the courts, and other community
groups. Drugs will be beaten only when all of us work together
to deliver a firm, consistent message to those who would use or
sell drugs: a message that illegal drugs will not be tolerated.
It is time to join in a national effort to achieve schools
without drugs.
SPECIAL SECTIONS
Teaching About Drug Prevention
How the Law Can Help
Specific Drugs and Their Effects
Sources of Information
References
TEACHING ABOUT DRUG PREVENTION
Teaching About Drug Prevention: Sample Topics and Learning
Activities
An effective drug prevention curriculum covers a broad set
of education objectives which are outlined in greater detail in
the Department of Education's handbook Drug Prevention
Curricula: A Guide to Selection and Implementation. This
section presents a model program for consideration by State and
local school authorities who have the responsibility to design
a curriculum that meets local needs and priorities. The program
consists of four objectives plus sample topics and learning
activities.
OBJECTIVE #1: To value and maintain sound personal health; to
understand how drugs affect health.
An effective drug prevention education program instills
respect for a healthy body and mind and imparts knowledge of
how the body functions, how personal habits contribute to good
health, and how drugs affect the body.
At the early elementary level, children learn how to care
for their bodies. Knowledge about habits, medicine, and poisons
lays the foundation for learning about drugs. Older children
begin to learn about the drug problem and study those drugs to
which they are most likely to be exposed. The curriculum for
secondary school students is increasingly drug specific as
students learn about the effects of drugs on their bodies and
on adolescent maturation. Health consequences of drug use,
including transmission of AIDS, are emphasized.
Sample topics for elementary school:
* The roles of nutrition, medicine, and health care
professionals in preventing and treating disease.
* The difficulties of recognizing which substances are safe
to eat, drink, or touch; ways to learn whether a substance
is safe: by consulting with an adult and by reading
labels.
* The effects of poisons on the body; the effects of
medicine on body chemistry: the wrong drug may make a
person ill.
* The nature of habits: their conscious and unconscious
development.
Sample topics for secondary school:
* Stress: how the body responds to stress; how drugs
increase stress.
* The chemical properties of drugs.
* The effects of drugs on the circulatory, digestive,
nervous, reproductive, and respiratory systems. The
effects of drugs on adolescent development.
* Patterns of substance abuse: the progressive effects of
drugs on the body and mind.
* What is addiction?
* How to get help for a drug or alcohol problem.
Children tend to be oriented toward the present and are
likely to feel invulnerable to the long-term effects of alcohol
and other drugs. For this reason, they should be taught about
the short-term effects of drug use (impact on appearance,
alertness, and coordination) as well as about the cumulative
effects.
Sample learning activities for elementary school:
* Make a coloring book depicting various substances. Color
only those items that are safe to eat.
* Use puppets to dramatize what can happen when drugs are
used.
* Write stories about what to do if a stranger offers candy,
pills, or a ride. Discuss options in class.
* Try, for a time, to break a bad habit. The teacher
emphasizes that it is easier not to start a bad habit than
to break one.
Sample learning activities for secondary school:
* Discuss the properties of alcohol and other drugs with
community experts: physicians, scientists, pharmacists, or
law enforcement officers.
* Interview social workers in drug treatment centers. Visit
an open meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics
Anonymous. These activities should be open only to mature
students; careful preparation and debriefing are
essential.
* Research the drug problem at school, in the community, or
in the sports and entertainment fields.
* Design a true-false survey about drug myths and facts;
conduct the survey with classmates and analyze the
results.
* Develop an accessible lending library on drugs, well
stocked with up-to-date and carefully chosen materials.
When an expert visits a class, both the class and the
expert should be prepared in advance. Students should learn
about the expert's profession and prepare questions to ask
during the visit. The expert should know what the objectives of
the session are and how the session fits into previous and
subsequent learning. The expert should participate in a
discussion or classroom activity, not simply appear as a
speaker.
OBJECTIVE #2: To respect laws and rules prohibiting drugs.
The program teaches children to respect rules and laws as
the embodiment of social values and as tools for protecting
individuals and society. It provides specific instruction about
laws concerning drugs.
Students in the early grades learn to identify rules and
to understand their importance, while older students learn
about the school drug code and laws regulating drugs.
Sample topics for elementary school:
* What rules are and what would happen without them.
* What values are and why they should guide behavior.
* What responsible behavior is.
* Why it is wrong to take drugs.
Sample topics for secondary school:
* Student responsibilities in promoting a drug-free school.
* Local, State, and Federal laws on controlled substances;
why these laws exist and how they are enforced.
* Legal consequences of drug use; penalties for driving
under the influence of alcohol or drugs; the relationship
between drugs and other crimes.
* Personal and societal costs of drug use.
Sample learning activities for elementary school:
* Use stories and pictures to identify rules and laws in
everyday life (e.g., lining up for recess).
* Imagine how to get to school in the absence of traffic
laws; try to play a game that has no rules.
* Name some things that are important to adults and then
list rules they have made about these things. (This
activity helps explain values.)
* Solve a simple problem (e.g., my sister hits me, or my
math grades are low). Discuss which solutions are best and
why.
* Discuss school drug policies with the principal and other
staff members. Learn how students can help make the policy
work better.
* Explain the connection between drug users, drug dealers,
and drug traffickers and law enforcement officers whose
lives are placed at risk or lost in their efforts to stop
the drug trade.
Sample learning activities for secondary school:
* Resolve hypothetical school situations involving drug use.
Analyze the consequences for the school, other students,
and the individuals involved.
* Collect information about accidents, crimes, and other
problems related to alcohol and other drugs. Analyze how
the problem might have been prevented and how the incident
affected the individuals involved.
* Conduct research projects. Interview members of the
community such as attorneys, judges, police officers,
State highway patrol officers, and insurance agents about
the effects of alcohol and other drug use on the daily
lives of teenagers and their families.
* Draft a legislative petition proposing enactment of a
State law on drug use. Participate in a mock trial or
legislative session patterned after an actual trial or
debate. Through these activities, students learn to
develop arguments on behalf of drug laws and their
enforcement.
OBJECTIVE #3: To recognize and resist pressures to use drugs.
Social influences play a key role in encouraging children
to try alcohol and other drugs. Pressures to use drugs come
from internal sources, such as a child's desire to feel
included in a group or to demonstrate independence, and
external influences, such as the opinions and example of
friends, older children and adults, and media messages.
Students must learn to identify these pressures. They must
then learn how to counteract messages to use drugs and gain
practice in saying no. The education program emphasizes
influences on behavior, responsible decision making, and
techniques for resisting pressures to use drugs.
Sample topics for elementary through high school:
* The influence of popular culture on behavior.
* The influence of peers, parents, and other important
individuals on a student's behavior; ways in which the
need to feel accepted by others influences behavior.
* Ways to make responsible decisions and to deal
constructively with disagreeable moments and pressures.
* Reasons for not taking drugs.
* Situations in which students may be pressured into using
alcohol and other drugs.
* Ways of resisting pressure to use drugs.
* Effects of drug use on family and friends, and benefits of
resisting pressure to use drugs.
Sample learning activities for elementary through high
school:
* Describe recent personal decisions. In small groups,
discuss what considerations influenced the decision (e.g.,
opinions of family or friends, beliefs, desire to be
popular) and analyze choices and consequences.
* Examine ads for cigarettes, over-the-counter drugs, and
alcohol, deciding what images are being projected and
whether the ads are accurate.
* Read stories about famous people who held to their beliefs
in the face of opposition. Students can discuss how these
people withstood the pressure and what they accomplished.
* Give reasons for not taking drugs. Discuss with a health
educator or drug counselor the false arguments for using
drugs. Develop counterarguments in response to typical
messages or pressures on behalf of drug use.
* Given a scenario depicting pressure to use drugs, act out
ways of resisting (simply refusing, giving a reason,
leaving the scene, etc.). Students should then practice
these techniques repeatedly. Demonstrate ways of resisting
pressures, using older students specially trained as peer
teachers.
* Present scenarios involving drug-related problems (e.g.,
learning that another student is selling drugs, learning
that a sibling is using drugs, or being offered a drive
home by a friend under the influence of drugs). Students
practice what they would do and discuss to whom they would
turn for help. Teachers should discuss and evaluate the
appropriateness of student responses.
* Discuss how it feels to resist pressures to take drugs.
Hold a poster contest to depict the benefits derived both
from not using and from saying no (e.g., being in control,
increased respect from others, self-confidence).
OBJECTIVE #4: To promote activities that reinforce the
positive, drug-free elements of student life.
School activities that provide opportunities for students
to have fun without alcohol and other drugs, and to contribute
to the school community, build momentum for peer pressure not
to use drugs. These school activities also nurture positive
examples by giving older students opportunities for leadership
related to drug prevention.
Sample activities:
* Make participation in school activities dependent on an
agreement not to use alcohol and other drugs.
* Ensure that alcohol and other drugs will not be available
at school-sponsored activities or parties. Plan these
events carefully to be certain that students have
attractive alternatives to drug use.
* Give students opportunities for leadership. They can be
trained to serve as peer leaders in drug prevention
programs, write plays, or design posters for younger
students. Activities such as these provide youthful role
models who demonstrate the importance of not using drugs.
Youth training programs are available that prepare
students to assist in drug education and provide
information on how to form drug-free youth groups.
* Form action teams for school improvement with membership
limited to students who are drug free. These action teams
campaign against drug use, design special drug-free
events, conduct and follow up on surveys of school needs,
help teachers with paperwork, tutor other students, or
improve the appearance of the school. Through these
activities, students develop a stake in their school, have
the opportunity to serve others, and have positive reasons
to reject drug use.
* Survey community resources that offer help for alcohol or
other drug problems or ways to cope with drug use by a
family member.
* Create a program in the school for support of students
returning from treatment.
HOW THE LAW CAN HELP
Federal law accords school officials broad authority to
regulate student conduct and supports reasonable and fair
disciplinary action. In 1984, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that
the constitutional rights of students in school are not
"automatically coextensive with the rights of adults in other
settings."1 Rather, recognizing that "in recent years . .. drug
use and violent crime in the schools have become major social
problems," the Court has emphasized the importance of effective
enforcement of school rules.2 On the whole, a school "is
allowed to determine the methods of student discipline and need
not exercise its discretion with undue timidity."3
An effective campaign against drug use requires a basic
understanding of legal techniques for searching and seizing
drugs and drug-related material, for suspending and expelling
students involved with drugs, and for assisting law enforcement
officials in the prosecution of drug offenders. Such knowledge
will help schools identify and penalize students who use or
sell drugs at school and enable school officials to uncover the
evidence needed to support prosecutions under Federal and State
criminal laws that contain strong penalties for drug use and
sale. In many cases, school officials can be instrumental in
successful prosecutions.
In addition to the general Federal statutes that make it a
crime to possess or distribute a controlled substance, there
are special Federal laws designed to protect children and
schools from drugs:
* An important part of the Controlled Substances Act makes
it a Federal crime to sell drugs in or near a public or
private elementary, secondary, vocational, or
postsecondary school. Under this "schoolhouse" law, sales
within 1,000 feet of a school are punishable by up to
double the sentence that would apply if the sale occurred
elsewhere. Even more serious punishments are available for
repeat offenders.4
* Distribution or sale to minors of controlled substances is
also a Federal crime. When anyone age 18 or over sells
drugs to anyone under 21, the seller runs the risk that he
or she will receive up to double the sentence that would
apply to a sale to an adult. Here too, more serious
penalties can be imposed on repeat offenders.5
By working with Federal and State prosecutors in their
area, schools can help to ensure that these laws and others
are used to make children and schools off-limits to drugs.
The following pages describe in general terms the Federal
laws applicable to the development of an effective school
drug policy. This section is not a compendium of all laws
that may apply to a school district, and it is not intended
to provide legal advice on all issues that may arise.
School officials must recognize that many legal issues in
the school context are also governed, in whole or in part,
by State and local laws, which, given their diversity,
cannot be covered here. Advice should be sought from legal
counsel in order to understand the applicable laws and to
ensure that the school's policies and actions make full
use of the available methods of enforcement.
Most private schools, particularly those that receive
little or no financial assistance from public sources and
are not associated with a public entity, enjoy a greater
degree of legal flexibility with respect to combating the
sale and use of illegal drugs. Depending on the terms of
their contracts with enrolled students, such schools may
be largely free of the restrictions that normally apply to
drug searches or the suspension or expulsion of student
drug users. Private school officials should consul legal
counsel to determine what enforcement measures may be
available to them.
School procedures should reflect the available legal means
for combating drug use. These procedures should be known to
and understood by school administrators and teachers as
well as by students, parents, and law enforcement
officials. Everyone should be aware that school authorities
have broad power within the law to take full, appropriate,
and effective action against drug offenders. Additional
sources of information on legal issues in school drug
policy are listed at the end of this handbook.
SEARCHING FOR DRUGS WITHIN THE SCHOOL
In some circumstances, the most important tool for
controlling drug use is an effective program of drug searches.
School administrators should not condone the presence of drugs
anywhere on school property. The presence of any drugs or
drug-related materials in school can mean only one thing--that
drugs are being used or distributed in school. Schools
committed to fighting drugs should do everything they can to
determine whether school grounds are being used to facilitate
the possession, use, or distribution of drugs, and to prevent
such crimes.
To institute an effective drug search policy in schools
with a substantial problem, school officials can take several
steps. First, they can identify the specific areas in the
school where drugs are likely to be found or used. Student
lockers, bathrooms, and "smoking areas" are obvious candidates.
Second, school administrators can clearly announce in writing
at the beginning of the school year that these areas will be
subject to unannounced searches and that students should
consider such areas "public" rather than "private." The more
clearly a school specifies, that these portions of the school's
property are public, the less likely it is that a court will
conclude that students retain any reasonable expectation of
privacy in these places and the less justification will be
needed to search such locations.
School officials should therefore formulate and
disseminate to all students and staff a written policy that
will permit an effective program of drug searches. Courts have
usually upheld locker searches where schools have established
written policies under which the school retains joint control
over student lockers, maintains duplicate or master keys for
all lockers, and reserves the right to inspect lockers at any
time.6 Although these practices have not become established law
in every part of the country, it will be easier to justify
locker searches in schools that have such policies. Moreover,
the mere existence of such policies can have a salutory effect.
If students know that their lockers may be searched, drug users
will find it much more difficult to obtain drugs in school.
The effectiveness of such searches may be improved with
the use of specially trained dogs. Courts have generally held
that the use of dogs to detect drugs on or in objects such as
lockers, ventilators, or desk, as opposed to persons is not a
"search" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.7
Accordingly, school administrators are generally justified in
using dogs in this way.
It is important to remember that any illicit drugs and
drug-related items discovered at school are evidence that may
be used in a criminal trial. School officials should be
careful, first, to protect the evidentiary integrity of such
seizures by making sure that the items are obtained in
permissible searches, because unlawfully acquired evidence will
not be admissible in criminal proceedings. Second, school
officials should work closely with local law enforcement
officials to preserve, in writing, the nature and circumstances
of any seizure of drug contraband. In a criminal prosecution,
the State must prove that the items produced as evidence in
court are the same items that were seized from the suspect.
Thus, the State must establish a "chain of custody" over the
seized items which accounts for the possession of the evidence
from the moment of its seizure to the moment it is introduced
in court. School policy regarding the disposition of
drug-related items should include procedures for the custody
and safekeeping of drugs and drug-related materials prior to
their removal by the police and procedures for recording the
circumstances regarding the seizure.
Searching Students
In some circumstances, teachers or other school personnel
will wish to search a student whom they believe to be in
possession of drugs. The Supreme Court has stated that searches
may be carried out according to "the dictates of reason and
common sense."8 The Court has recognized that the need of
school authorities to maintain order justifies searches that
might otherwise be unreasonable if undertaken by police
officers or in the larger community. Thus the Court has held
that school officials, unlike the police, do not need "probable
cause" to conduct a search. Nor do they need a search warrant.9
Under the Supreme Court's ruling:
* School officials may institute a search if there are
"reasonable grounds" to believe that the search will
reveal evidence that the student has violated or is
violating either the law or the rules of the school.
* The extent of the permissible search will depend on
whether the measures used are reasonably related to the
purpose of the search and are not excessively intrusive in
light of the age and sex of the student.
* School officials are not required to obtain search
warrants when they carry out searches independent of the
police and other law enforcement officials. A more
stringent legal standard may apply if law enforcement
officials are involved in the search.
Interpretation of "Reasonable Grounds"
Lower courts are beginning to interpret and apply the
"reasonable grounds" standard in the school setting. From these
cases it appears that courts will require more than general
suspicion, curiosity, rumor, or a hunch to justify searching
students or their possessions. Factors that will help sustain a
search include the observation of specific and describable
behavior or activities leading one reasonably to believe that a
given student is engaging in or has engaged in prohibited
conduct. The more specific the evidence in support of searching
a particular student, the more likely the search will be
upheld. For example, courts using a "reasonable grounds" (or
similar) standard have upheld the right of school officials to
search the following:
* A student's purse, after a teacher saw her smoking in a
restroom and the student denied having smoked or being a
smoker.10
* A student's purse, after several other students said that
she had been distributing firecrackers.11
* A student's pockets, based on a phone tip about drugs from
an anonymous source believed to have previously provided
accurate information.12
Scope of Permissible Search
School officials are authorized to conduct searches within
reasonable limits. The Supreme Court has described two aspects
of these limits. First, when officials conduct a search, they
must use only measures that are reasonably related to the
purpose of the search; second, the search may not be
excessively intrusive in light of the age or sex of the
student.
For example, if a teacher believes he or she has seen one
student passing a marijuana cigarette to another student, the
teacher might reasonably search the students and any nearby
belongings in which the students might have tried to hide the
drug. If it turns out that what the teacher saw was a stick of
gum, the teacher would have no justification for any further
search for drugs.
The more intrusive the search, the greater the
justification that will be required by the courts. A search of
a student's jacket or bookbag can often be justified as
reasonable. At the other end of the spectrum, strip searches
are considered a highly intrusive invasion of individual
privacy and are viewed with disfavor by the courts (although
even these searches have been upheld in certain extraordinary
circumstances).
School officials do not necessarily have to stop a search
if they find what they are looking for. If the search of a
student reveals items that create reasonable grounds for
suspecting that the student may also possess other evidence of
crime or misconduct, the school officials may continue the
search. For example, if a teacher justifiably searches a
student's purse for cigarettes and finds rolling papers like
those used for marijuana cigarettes, it will then be reasonable
for the teacher to search the rest of the purse for other
evidence of drugs.
Consent
If a student consents to a search, the search is
permissible, regardless of whether there would otherwise be
reasonable grounds for the search. To render such a search
valid, however, the student must give consent knowingly and
voluntarily.
Establishing whether the student's consent was voluntary
can be difficult, and the burden is on the school officials to
prove voluntary consent. If a student agrees to be searched out
of fear or as a result of other coercion, that consent will
probably be found invalid. Similarly, if school officials
indicate that a student must agree to a search or if the
student is very young or otherwise unaware that he or she has
the right to object, the student's consent will also be held
invalid. School officials may find it helpful to explain to
students that they do not have to consent to a search. In some
cases, standard consent forms may be useful.
If a student is asked to consent to a search and refuses,
that refusal does not mean that the search may not be
conducted. Rather, in the absence of consent, school officials
retain the authority to conduct a search when there are
reasonable grounds to justify it, as described previously.
Special Types of Student Searches
Schools with severe drug problems may occasionally wish to
resort to more intrusive searches, such as the use of trained
dogs or urinalysis, to screen students for drug use. The
Supreme Court has yet to address these issues. The following
paragraphs explain the existing rulings on these subjects by
other courts:
* Specially trained dogs. The few courts that have
considered this issue disagree as to whether the use of a
specially trained dog to detect drugs on students
constitutes a search within the meaning of the Fourth
Amendment. Some courts have held that a dog's sniffing of
a student is a search, and that, in the school setting,
individualized grounds for reasonable suspicion are
required in order for such a "sniff-search" to be held
constitutional.13 Under this standard, a blanket search of
a school's entire student population by specially trained
dogs would be prohibited.
At least one other court has held that the use of trained
dogs does not constitute a search, and has permitted the
use of such dogs without individualized grounds for
suspicion.14 Another factor that courts may consider is
the way that the dogs detect the presence of drugs. In
some instances, the dogs are merely led down hallways or
classroom aisles. In contrast, having the dogs actually
touch parts of the students' bodies is more intrusive and
would probably require specific justification.
Courts have generally held that the use of specially
trained dogs to detect drugs on objects, as opposed to
persons, is not a search within the meaning of the Fourth
Amendment. Therefore, school officials may often be able
to use dogs to inspect student lockers and school
property.15
* Drug testing. The use of urinalysis or other tests to
screen students for drugs is a relatively new phenomenon
and the law in this area is still evolving. Few courts
have considered the use of urinalysis to screen public
school students for drugs, and those courts that have done
so have reached mixed results.16 The permissibility of
drug testing of students has not yet been determined under
all circumstances, although drug testing of adults has
been upheld in some settings.
SUSPENSION AND EXPULSION
A school policy may lawfully provide for penalties of
varying severity, including suspension and expulsion, to
respond to drug-related offenses. The Supreme Court has held
that because schools "need to be able to impose disciplinary
sanctions for a wide range of unanticipated conduct disruptive
of the educational process," a school's disciplinary rules need
not be so detailed as a criminal code.17 Nonetheless, it is
helpful for school policies to be explicit about the types of
offenses that will be punished and about the penalties that may
be imposed for each of these (e.g., use, possession, or sale of
drugs). State and local law will usually determine the range of
sanctions that is permissible. In general, courts will require
only that the penalty imposed for drug-related misconduct be
rationally related to the severity of the offense.
School officials should not forget that they have
jurisdiction to impose punishment for some drug-related
offenses that occur off-campus. Depending on State and local
laws, schools are often able to punish conduct at off-campus,
school-sponsored events as well as off-campus conduct that has
a direct and immediate effect on school activities.
Procedural Guidelines
Students facing suspension or expulsion from school are
entitled under the U.S. Constitution and most State
constitutions to commonsense due process protections of notice
and an opportunity to be heard. Because the Supreme Court has
recognized that a school's ability to maintain order would be
impeded if formal procedures were required every time school
authorities sought to discipline a student, the Court has held
that the nature and formality of the "hearing" will depend on
the severity of the sanction being imposed.
A formal hearing is not required when a school seeks to
suspend a student for 10 days or less.18 The Supreme Court has
held that due process in that situation requires only that:
* The school must inform the student, either orally or in
writing, of the charges against him or her and of the
evidence to support those charges.
* The school must give the student an opportunity to deny
the charges and present his or her side of the story.
* As a general rule, this notice and rudimentary hearing
should precede a suspension. However, a student whose
presence poses a continuing danger to persons or property
or an ongoing threat of disrupting the academic process
may be immediately removed from school. In such a
situation, the notice and rudimentary hearing should
follow as soon as possible.
The Supreme Court has also stated that more formal
procedures may be required for suspensions longer than 10 days
and for expulsions. Although the Court has not established
specific procedures to be followed in those situations, other
Federal courts have set the following guidelines for
expulsions.19 These guidelines would apply to suspensions
longer than 10 days as well:
* The student must be notified in writing of the specific
charges against him or her which, if proven, would justify
expulsion.
* The student should be given the names of the witnesses
against him or her and an oral or written report on the
facts to which each witness will testify.
* The student should be given the opportunity to present a
defense against the charges and to produce witnesses or
testimony on his or her behalf.
Many States have laws governing the procedures required
for suspensions and expulsions. Because applicable statutes and
judicial rulings vary across the country, local school
districts may enjoy a greater or lesser degree of flexibility
in establishing procedures for suspensions and expulsions.
School officials must also be aware of the special
procedures that apply to suspension or expulsion of students
with disabilities under Federal law and regulations.20
Effect of Criminal Proceedings Against a Student
A school may usually pursue disciplinary action against a
student regardless of the status of any outside criminal
prosecution. That is, Federal law does not require the school
to await the outcome of the criminal prosecution before
initiating proceedings to suspend or expel a student or to
impose whatever other penalty is appropriate for the violation
of the school's rules. In addition, a school is generally free
under Federal law to discipline a student when there is
evidence that the student has violated a school rule, even if a
juvenile court has acquitted (or convicted) the student or if
local authorities have declined to prosecute criminal charges
stemming from the same incident. Schools may wish to discuss
this subject with counsel.
Effect of Expulsion
State and local law will determine the effect of expelling
a student from school. Some State laws require the provision of
alternative schooling for students below a certain age. In
other areas, expulsion may mean the removal from public schools
for the balance of the school year or even the permanent denial
of access to the public school system.
CONFIDENTIALITY OF EDUCATION RECORDS
To rid their schools of drugs, school officials will
periodically need to report drug-related crimes to police and
to help local law enforcement authorities detect and prosecute
drug offenders. In doing so, schools will need to take steps to
ensure compliance with Federal and State laws governing
confidentiality of student records.
The Federal law that addresses this issue is the Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA),21 which applies to
any school that receives Federal funding and which limits the
disclosure of certain information about students that is
contained in education records.22 Under FERPA, disclosure of
information in education records to individuals or entities
other than parents, students, and school officials is
permissible only in specified situations.23 In many cases,
unless the parents or an eligible student24 provides written
consent, FERPA will limit a school's ability to turn over
education records or to disclose information from them to the
police. Such disclosure is permitted, however, if (1) it is
required by a court order or subpoena, or (2) it is warranted
by a health and safety emergency. In the first of these two
cases, reasonable efforts must be made to notify the student's
parents before the disclosure is made. FERPA also permits
disclosure if a State law enacted before November 19, 1974,
specifically requires disclosure to State and local officials.
Schools should be aware, however, that because FERPA
governs only the information in education records, it does not
limit disclosure of other information. Thus, school employees
are free to disclose any information of which they become aware
through personal observation. For example, a teacher who
witnesses a drug transaction may, when the police arrive,
report what he or she witnessed. Similarly, evidence seized
from a student during a search is not an education record and
may be turned over to the police without constraint.
State laws and school policies may impose additional, and
sometimes more restrictive, requirements regarding the
disclosure of information about students. Because this area of
the law is complicated, it is especially important that an
attorney be involved in formulating school policy under FERPA
and applicable State laws.
OTHER LEGAL ISSUES
Lawsuits Against Schools or School Of Officials
Disagreements between parents or students and school
officials about disciplinary measures usually can be resolved
informally. Occasionally, however, a school's decisions and
activities relating to disciplinary matters are the subject of
lawsuits by parents or students against administrators,
teachers, and school systems. For these reasons, it is
advisable that school districts obtain adequate insurance
coverage for themselves and for all school personnel for
liability arising from disciplinary actions.
Suits may be brought in Federal or State court; typically,
they are based on a claim that a student's constitutional or
statutory rights have been violated. Frequently, these suits
will seek to revoke the school district's imposition of some
disciplinary measure, for example, by ordering the
reinstatement of a student who has been expelled or suspended.
Suits may also attempt to recover money damages from the school
district or the employee involved, or both; however, court
awards of money damages are extremely rare. Moreover, although
there can be no guarantee of a given result in any particular
case, courts in recent years have tended to discourage such
litigation,
In general, disciplinary measures imposed reasonably and
in accordance with established legal requirements will be
upheld by the courts. As a rule, Federal judges will not
substitute their interpretations of school rules or regulations
for those of local school authorities or otherwise second-guess
reasonable decisions by school officials.25 In addition, school
officials are entitled to a qualified good-faith immunity from
personal liability for damages for having violated a student's
Federal constitutional or civil rights.26 When this immunity
applies, it shields school officials from any personal
liability for money damages. Thus, as a general matter,
personal liability is very rare, because officials should not
be held personally liable unless their actions are clearly
unlawful, unreasonable, or arbitrary.
When a court does award damages, the award may be
"compensatory" or "punitive." Compensatory damages are awarded
to compensate the student for injuries actually suffered as a
result of the violation of his or her rights and cannot be
based upon the abstract "value" or "importance" of the
constitutional rights in question.27 The burden is on the
student to prove that he or she suffered actual injury as a
result of the deprivation. Thus, a student who is suspended,
but not under the required procedures, will not be entitled to
compensation if the student would have been suspended had a
proper hearing been held. If the student cannot prove that the
failure to hold a hearing itself caused him or her some
compensable harm, then the student is entitled to no more than
nominal damages, such as $1.00.28 "Punitive damages" are
awarded to punish the perpetrator of the injury. Normally,
punitive damages are awarded only when the conduct in question
is malicious, unusually reckless, or otherwise reprehensible.
Parents and students can also claim that actions by a
school or school officials have violated State law. For
example, it can be asserted that a teacher "assaulted" a
student in violation of a State criminal law. The procedures
and standards in actions involving such violations are
determined by each State. Some States provide a qualified
immunity from tort liability under standards similar to the
"good faith" immunity in Federal civil rights actions. Other
States provide absolute immunity under their law for actions
taken in the course of a school official's duties.
Nondiscrimination in Enforcement of Discipline
Federal law applicable to programs or activities receiving
Federal financial assistance prohibits school officials who are
administering discipline from discriminating against students
on the basis of race, color, national origin, or sex. Schools
should therefore administer their discipline policies
evenhandedly, without regard to such considerations. Thus, as a
general matter, students with similar disciplinary records who
violate the same rule in the same way should be treated
similarly. For example, if male and female students with no
prior record of misbehavior are caught together smoking
marijuana, it would not, in the absence of other relevant
factors, be advisable for the school to suspend the male
student for 10 days while imposing only an afternoon detention
on the female student. Such divergent penalties for the same
offense may be appropriate, however, if the student who
received the harsher punishment had a history of misconduct or
committed other infractions after this first confrontation with
school authorities.
School officials should also be aware of and adhere to the
special rules and procedures for the disciplining of students
with disabilities under the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act, 20 U.S.C. 1400-20 and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. 794. (For legal
citations, see Reference Section p. 84.)
RESOURCES
Specific Drugs and Their Effects
TOBACCO
Effects
The smoking of tobacco products is the chief avoidable
cause of death in our society. Smokers are more likely than
nonsmokers to contract heart disease--some 170,000 die each
year from smoking-related coronary heart disease. Lung, larynx,
esophageal, bladder, pancreatic, and kidney cancers also strike
smokers at increased rates. Some 30 percent of cancer deaths
(130,000 per year) are linked to smoking. Chronic obstructive
lung diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis are 10
times more likely to occur among smokers than among nonsmokers.
Smoking during pregnancy also poses serious risks.
Spontaneous abortion, preterm birth, low birth weights, and
fetal and infant deaths are all more likely to occur when the
pregnant woman/mother is a smoker.
Cigarette smoke contains some 4,000 chemicals, several of
which are known carcinogens. Other toxins and irritants found
in smoke can produce eye, nose, and throat irritations. Carbon
monoxide, another component of cigarette smoke, combines with
hemoglobin in the blood stream to form carboxyhemoglobin, a
substance that interferes with the body's ability to obtain and
use oxygen.
Perhaps the most dangerous substance in tobacco smoke is
nicotine. Although it is implicated in the onset of heart
attacks and cancer, its most dangerous role is reinforcing and
strengthening the desire to smoke. Because nicotine is highly
addictive, addicts find it very difficult to stop smoking. Of
1,000 typical smokers, fewer than 20 percent succeed in
stopping on the first try.
Although the harmful effects of smoking cannot be
questioned, people who quit can make significant strides in
repairing damage done by smoking. For pack-a-day smokers, the
increased risk of heart attack dissipates after 10 years. The
likelihood of contracting lung cancer as a result of smoking
can also be greatly reduced by quitting.
ALCOHOL
Effects
Alcohol consumption causes a number of marked changes in
behavior. Even low doses significantly impair the judgment and
coordination required to drive a car safely, increasing the
likelihood that the driver will be involved in an accident. Low
to moderate doses of alcohol also increase the incidence of a
variety of aggressive acts, including spouse and child abuse.
Moderate to high doses of alcohol cause marked impairments in
higher mental functions, severely altering a person's ability
to learn and remember information. Very high doses cause
respiratory depression and death. If combined with other
depressants of the central nervous system, much lower doses of
alcohol will produce the effects just described.
Repeated use of alcohol can lead to dependence. Sudden
cessation of alcohol intake is likely to produce withdrawal
symptoms, including severe anxiety, tremors, hallucinations,
and convulsions. Alcohol withdrawal can be life-threatening.
Long-term consumption of large quantities of alcohol,
particularly when combined with poor nutrition, can also lead
to permanent damage to vital organs such as the brain and the
liver.
Mothers who drink alcohol during pregnancy may give birth
to infants with fetal alcohol syndrome. These infants have
irreversible physical abnormalities and mental retardation. In
addition, research indicates that children of alcoholic parents
are at greater risk than other youngsters of becoming
alcoholics.
CANNABIS
Effects
All forms of cannabis have negative physical and mental
effects. Several regularly observed physical effects of
cannabis are a substantial increase in the heart rate,
bloodshot eyes, a dry mouth and throat, and increased appetite.
Use of cannabis may impair or reduce short-term memory and
comprehension, alter sense of time, and reduce ability to
perform tasks requiring concentration and coordination, such as
driving a car. Research also shows that students do not retain
knowledge when they are "high." Motivation and cognition may be
altered, making the acquisition of new information difficult.
Marijuana can also produce paranoia and psychosis.
Because users often inhale the unfiltered smoke deeply and
then hold it in their lungs as long as possible, marijuana is
damaging to the lungs and pulmonary system. Marijuana smoke
contains more cancer-causing agents than tobacco smoke.
Long-term users of cannabis may develop psychological
dependence and require more of the drug to get the same effect.
The drug can become the center of their lives.
INHALANTS
Effects
The immediate negative effects of inhalants include
nausea, sneezing, coughing, nosebleeds, fatigue, lack of
coordination, and loss of appetite. Solvents and aerosol sprays
also decrease the heart and respiratory rates and impair
judgment. Amyl and butyl nitrite cause rapid pulse, headaches,
and involuntary passing of urine and feces. Long-term use may
result in hepatitis or brain damage.
Deeply inhaling the vapors, or using large amounts over a
short time, may result in disorientation, violent behavior,
unconsciousness, or death. High concentrations of inhalants can
cause suffocation by displacing the oxygen in the lungs or by
depressing the central nervous system to the point that
breathing stops.
Long-term use can cause weight loss, fatigue, electrolyte
imbalance, and muscle fatigue. Repeated sniffing of
concentrated vapors over time can permanently damage the
nervous system.
COCAINE
Effects
Cocaine stimulates the central nervous system. Its
immediate effects include dilated pupils and elevated blood
pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and body temperature.
Occasional use can cause a stuffy or runny nose, while chronic
use can ulcerate the mucous membrane of the nose. Injecting
cocaine with contaminated equipment can cause AIDS, hepatitis,
and other diseases. Preparation of freebase, which involves the
use of volatile solvents, can result in death or injury from
fire or explosion. Cocaine can produce psychological and
physical dependency, a feeling that the user cannot function
without the drug. In addition, tolerance develops rapidly.
Crack or freebase rock is extremely addictive, and its
effects are felt within 10 seconds. The physical effects
include dilated pupils, increased pulse rate, elevated blood
pressure, insomnia, loss of appetite, tactile hallucinations,
paranoia, and seizures.
The use of cocaine can cause death by cardiac arrest or
respiratory failure.
OTHER STIMULANTS
Effects
Stimulants can cause increased heart and respiratory
rates, elevated blood pressure, dilated pupils, and decreased
appetite. In addition, users may experience sweating, headache,
blurred vision, dizziness, sleeplessness, and anxiety.
Extremely high doses can cause a rapid or irregular heartbeat,
tremors, loss of coordination, and even physical collapse. An
amphetamine injection creates a sudden increase in blood
pressure that can result in stroke, very high fever, or heart
failure.
In addition to the physical effects, users report feeling
restless, anxious, and moody. Higher doses intensify the
effects. Persons who use large amounts of amphetamines over a
long period of time can develop an amphetamine psychosis that
includes hallucinations, delusions, and paranoia. These
symptoms usually disappear when drug use ceases.
DEPRESSANTS
Effects
The effects of depressants are in many ways similar to the
effects of alcohol. Small amounts can produce calmness and
relaxed muscles, but somewhat larger doses can cause slurred
speech, staggering gait, and altered perception. Very large
doses can cause respiratory depression, coma, and death. The
combination of depressants and alcohol can multiply the effects
of the drugs, thereby multiplying the risks.
The use of depressants can cause both physical and
psychological dependence. Regular use over time may result in a
tolerance to the drug, leading the user to increase the
quantity consumed. When regular users suddenly stop taking
large doses, they may develop withdrawal symptoms ranging from
restlessness, insomnia, and anxiety to convulsions and death.
Babies born to mothers who abuse depressants during
pregnancy may be physically dependent on the drugs and show
withdrawal symptoms shortly after they are born. Birth defects
and behavioral problems also may result.
HALLUCINOGENS
Effects
Phencyclidine (PCP) interrupts the functions of the
neocortex, the section of the brain that controls the intellect
and keeps instincts in check. Because the drug blocks pain
receptors, violent PCP episodes may result in self-inflicted
injuries.
The effects of PCP vary, but users frequently report a
sense of distance and estrangement. Time and body movement are
slowed down. Muscular coordination worsens and senses are
dulled. Speech is blocked and incoherent.
Chronic users of PCP report persistent memory problems and
speech difficulties. Some of these effects may last 6 months to
a year following prolonged daily use. Mood
disorders--depression, anxiety, and violent behavior--also
occur. In later stages of chronic use, users often exhibit
paranoid and violent behavior and experience hallucinations.
Large doses may produce convulsions and coma, as well as heart
and lung failure.
Lysergic acid {LSD), mescaline, and psilocybin cause
illusions and hallucinations. The physical effects may include
dilated pupils, elevated body temperature, increased heart rate
and blood pressure, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, and
tremors.
Sensations and feelings may change rapidly. It is common
to have a bad psychological reaction to LSD, mescaline, and
psilocybin. The user may experience panic, confusion,
suspicion, anxiety, and loss of control. Delayed effects, or
flashbacks, can occur even after use has ceased.
NARCOTICS
Effects
Narcotics initially produce a feeling of euphoria that
often is followed by drowsiness, nausea, and vomiting. Users
also may experience constricted pupils, watery eyes, and
itching. An overdose may produce slow and shallow breathing,
clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and possible death.
Tolerance to narcotics develops rapidly and dependence is
likely. The use of contaminated syringes may result in disease
such as AIDS, endocarditis, and hepatitis. Addiction in
pregnant women can lead to premature, stillborn, or addicted
infants who experience severe withdrawal symptoms.
DESIGNER DRUGS
Effects
Illegal drugs are defined in terms of their chemical
formulas. To circumvent these legal restrictions, underground
chemists modify the molecular structure of certain illegal
drugs to produce analogs known as designer drugs. These drugs
can be several hundred times stronger than the drugs they are
designed to imitate.
Many of the so-called designer drugs are related to
amphetamines and have mild stimulant properties but are mostly
euphoriants. They can produce severe neurochemical damage to
the brain.
The narcotic analogs can cause symptoms such as those seen
in Parkinson's disease: uncontrollable tremors, drooling,
impaired speech, paralysis, and irreversible brain damage.
Analogs of amphetamines and methamphetamines cause nausea,
blurred vision, chills or sweating, and faintness.
Psychological effects include anxiety, depression, and
paranoia. As little as one dose can cause brain damage. The
analogs of phencyclidine cause illusions, hallucinations, and
impaired perception.
ANABOLIC STEROIDS
Anabolic steroids are a group of powerful compounds
closely related to the male sex hormone testosterone. Developed
in the 1930s, steroids are seldom prescribed by physicians
today. Current legitimate medical uses are limited to certain
kinds of anemia, severe burns, and some types of breast cancer.
Taken in combination with a program of muscle-building
exercise and diet, steroids may contribute to increases in body
weight and muscular strength. Because of these properties,
athletes in a variety of sports have used steroids since the
1950s, hoping to enhance performance. Today, they are being
joined by increasing numbers of young people seeking to
accelerate their physical development.
Steroid users subject themselves to more than 70 side
effects ranging in severity from liver cancer to acne and
including psychological as well as physical reactions. The
liver and the cardiovascular and reproductive systems are most
seriously affected by steroid use. In males, use can cause
withered testicles, sterility, and impotence. In females,
irreversible masculine traits can develop along with breast
reduction and sterility. Psychological effects in both sexes
include very aggressive behavior known as "roid rage" and
depression. While some side effects appear quickly, others,
such as heart attacks and strokes, may not show up for years.
Signs of steroid use include quick weight and muscle gains
(if steroids are being used in conjunction with a weight
training program); behavioral changes, particularly increased
aggressiveness and combativeness; jaundice; purple or red spots
on the body; swelling of feet or lower legs; trembling;
unexplained darkening of the skin; persistent unpleasant breath
odor, and severe acne.
Steroids are produced in tablet or capsule form for oral
ingestion, or as a liquid for intramuscular injection.
Sources of Information
The Department of Education does not endorse private or
commercial products or services, or products or services not
affiliated with the Federal Government. The sources of
information listed on this and the following pages are intended
only as a partial listing of the resources that are available
to readers of this booklet. Readers are encouraged to research
and inform themselves of the products or services, relating to
drug and alcohol abuse, that are available to them. Readers are
encouraged to visit their public libraries to find out more
about the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse, or to call local,
State, or national hotlines for further information, advice, or
assistance.
TOLL-FREE INFORMATION
1-800-COCAINE--COCAINE HELPLINE
A round-the-clock information and referral service.
Recovering cocaine addict counselors answer the phones, offer
guidance, and refer drug users and parents to local public and
private treatment centers and family learning centers.
1-800-NCA-CALL--NATIONAL COUNCIL ON ALCOHOLISM INFORMATION LINE
The National Council on Alcoholism, Inc., is the national
nonprofit organization combating alcoholism, other drug
addictions, and related problems. Provides information about
NCA's State and local affiliates' activities in their areas.
Also provides referral services to families and individuals
seeking help with an alcohol or other drug problem.
1-800-662-HELP--NIDA HOTLINE
NIDA Hotline, operated by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, is a confidential information and referral line that
directs callers to cocaine abuse treatment centers in the local
community. Free materials on drug use also are distributed in
response to inquiries.
GENERAL READINGS
Publications listed below are free unless otherwise noted.
Adolescent Drug Abuse: Analyses of Treatment Research, by
Elizabeth R. Rahdert and John Grabowski, 1988. This 139-page
book assesses the adolescent drug user and offers theories,
techniques, and findings about treatment and prevention. It
also discusses family-based approaches. National Clearinghouse
for Alcohol and Drug Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD
20852.
Adolescent Peer Pressure Theory, Correlates, and Program
Implications for Drug Abuse Prevention, 1988, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services. This 115-page book focuses on
constructive ways of channeling peer pressure. This volume was
developed to help parents and professionals understand the
pressures associated with adolescence, the factors associated
with drug use, and other forms of problem behavior. Different
peer program approaches, ways in which peer programs can be
implemented, and research suggestions are included. National
Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, P.O. Box 2345,
Rockville, MD 20852.
Building Drug-Free Schools, by Richard A. Hawley, Robert C.
Peterson, and Margaret C. Mason, 1986. This four-part drug
prevention kit for grades K-12 provides school staff, parents,
and community groups with suggestions for developing a workable
school drug policy, K-12 curriculum, and community support. The
kit consists of three written guides ($50) and a film ($275).
American Council for Drug Education, 204 Monroe Street, Suite
110, Rockville, MD 20852. Telephone (301) 294-0600.
The Challenge newsletter highlights successful school-based
programs, provides suggestions on effective prevention
techniques and the latest research on drugs and their effects.
Published quarterly by the U.S. Department of Education and
available from the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852.
Courtwatch Manual. A 111-page manual explaining the court
system, the criminal justice process, Courtwatch activities,
and what can be done before and after a criminal is sentenced.
Washington Legal Foundation, 1705 N Street, NW, Washington, DC
20036. Enclose $5 for postage and handling. Telephone (202)
857-0240.
Drug Prevention Curricula: A Guide to Selection and
Implementation, by the U.S. Department of Education, 1988.
Written with the help of a distinguished advisory panel, this
76-page handbook represents the best current thinking about
drug prevention education. It shows what to look for when
adopting or adapting ready-made curricula, and suggests
important lessons that ought to be part of any prevention
education sequence. National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852.
Getting Tough on Gateway Drugs, by Robert DuPont, Jr., 1985.
This 330-page book describes the drug problem, the
drug-dependence syndrome, the gateway drugs, and some ways that
families can prevent and treat drug problems. American
Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1400 K Street, NW, Suite 1101,
Washington, DC 20005, paperback, $9.95. Telephone
1-800-368-5777 and in the DC area (202) 682-6269.
Gone Way Down: Teenage Drug-Use Is a Disease, by Miller Newton,
1981, revised 1987. This 72-page book describes the stages of
adolescent drug use. American Studies Press, paperback, $3.95.
Telephone (813) 961-7200.
Kids and Drugs: A Handbook for Parents and Professionals, by
Joyce Tobias, 1986, reprinted 1987. A 96-page handbook about
adolescent drug and alcohol use, the effects of drugs and the
drug culture, stages of chemical use, the formation of parent
groups, and available resources. PANDAA Press, 4111 Watkins
Trail, Annandale, VA 22003. Telephone (703) 750-9285,
paperback, $4.95 (volume discounts).
National Trends in Drug Use and Related Factors Among American
High School Students, 1975-1986, by Jerald G. Bachman, Lloyd D.
Johnston, and Patrick M. O'Malley, 1987. This 265-page book
reports on trends in drug use and attitudes of high school
seniors, based on an annual survey conducted since 1975.
National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, P.O.
Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852.
Parents, Peers and Pot II: Parents in Action, by Marsha Manatt,
1983, reprinted 1988. This 160-page book describes the
formation of parent groups in rural, suburban, and urban
communities. National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852.
Peer Pressure Reversal, by Sharon Scott, 1985, reprinted 1988.
A 183-page guidebook for parents, teachers, and concerned
citizens to enable them to teach peer pressure reversal skills
to children. Human Resource Development Press, 22 Amherst Road,
Amherst, MA 01002. Telephone (413) 253-3488, paperback, $9.95.
Pot Safari, by Peggy Mann, 1982, reprinted 1987. A 134-page
book for parents and teenagers. Distinguished research
scientists are interviewed on the subject of marijuana.
Woodmere Press, Cathedral Finance Station, P.O. Box 20190, New
York, NY 10125. Telephone (212) 678-7839. Paperback, $6.95 plus
shipping (volume discounts).
Strategies for Controlling Adolescent Drug Use, by Michael J.
Polich et al., 1984. This 196-page book reviews the scientific
literature on the nature of drug use and the effectiveness of
drug law enforcement, treatment, and prevention programs. The
Rand Corporation, 1700 Main Street, P.O. Box 2138, Santa
Monica, CA 90406-2138, R-3076-CHF. Telephone
(213) 393-0411, paperback $15.00.
Team Up for Drug Prevention With America's Young Athletes. A
free booklet for coaches that includes information about
alcohol and other drugs, reasons why athletes use drugs,
suggested activities for coaches, a prevention program, a
survey for athletes and coaches, and sample letters to parents.
Drug Enforcement Administration, Demand Reduction Section, 1405
I Street, NW, Washington, DC 20537. Telephone (202) 786-4096.
The Fact Is...You Can Prevent Alcohol and Other Drug Problems
Among Elementary School Children, 1988. This 17-page booklet
includes audiovisuals, program descriptions, and professional
and organizational resources to assist educators and parents of
young children. National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852.
VIDEOTAPES
The following drug prevention videos were developed by the
U.S. Department of Education. They are available for loan
through the Department's Regional Centers listed on pages 78
and 79 and the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information, P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20852; (301)
468-2600.
Elementary School
The Drug Avengers. Ten 5-minute animated adventures that urge
caution about ingesting unfamiliar substances; encourage
students to trust their instincts when they think something is
wrong; and show that drugs make things worse, not better.
Fast Forward Future. A magical device allows youngsters to peer
into the future and see on a TV screen what will happen if they
use drugs and what will happen if they remain drug free.
Straight Up. A fantasy adventure that features information on
the effects of drugs, developing refusal skills, building
self-esteem, and resisting peer pressure.
Junior High
Straight at Ya. Tips on peer pressure, saying no, and building
self-esteem.
Lookin' Good. A two-part series based on actual incidents that
convey the dangers of drug use and promote the use of peer
support groups.
Straight Talk. Teens discuss why they won't use drugs and ways
to avoid drugs.
High School
Hard Facts About Alcohol, Marijuana, and Crack. Offers factual
information about the dangers of drug use in a series of
dramatic vignettes.
Speak Up, Speak Out: Learning to Say No to Drugs. Gives
students specific techniques they can use to resist peer
pressure and say no to drug use.
Dare to Be Different. Uses the friendship of two athletes in
their last year of high school to illustrate the importance of
goals and values in resisting pressures to use drugs.
Downfall: Sports and Drugs. Shows how drugs affect athletic
performance and examines the consequences of drug use,
including steroid use, on every aspect of an athlete's
life--career, family, friends, sense of accomplishment, and
self-esteem.
Private Victories. Illustrates the effects of drug and alcohol
use on students and the value of positive peer influences in
resisting peer pressure to use drugs.
SOURCES OF FREE CATALOGS OF PUBLICATIONS
Hazelden Educational Materials. A source for pamphlets and
books on drug use and alcoholism and curriculum materials for
drug prevention. Telephone 1-800-328-9000. In Minnesota, call
(612) 257-4010 or 1-800-257-0070.
National Council on Alcoholism. A source for pamphlets,
booklets, and fact sheets on alcoholism and drug use. Telephone
(212) 206-6770.
Johnson Institute. A source for audiocassettes, films,
videocassettes, pamphlets, and books on alcoholism and drug
use. Offers books and pamphlets on prevention and intervention
for children, teens, parents, and teachers. Telephone toll-free
1-800-231-5165. In Minnesota, 1-800-247-0484 and in
Minneapolis/St. Paul area, 944-0511.
National Association for Children of Alcoholics. A source for
books, pamphlets, and handbooks for children of alcoholics.
Conducts regional workshops and provides a directory of local
members and meetings. Telephone (714) 499-3889.
SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY RESOURCES
ACTION Drug Prevention Program. ACTION, the Federal
volunteer agency, works at the local, State, and national
levels to encourage and help fund the growth of youth, parents,
and senior citizen groups and networks committed to helping
youth remain drug free. 806 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite
M-606, Washington, DC 20525. Telephone (202) 634-9757.
American Council for Drug Education (ACDE). ACDE organizes
conferences; develops media campaigns; reviews scientific
findings; publishes books, a quarterly newsletter, and
education kits for physicians, schools, and libraries; and
produces films. 204 Monroe Street, Suite 110, Rockville, MD
20852. Telephone (301) 294-0600.
Committees of Correspondence. This organization provides a
newsletter and bulletins on issues, ideas, and contacts.
Publishes a resource list and pamphlets. Membership is $15.00.
57 Conant Street, Room 113, Danvers, MA 09123. Telephone (508)
774-2641.
Drug-Free Schools and Communities--Regional Centers
Program, U.S. Department of Education. This program is designed
to help local school districts, State education agencies, and
institutions of higher education to develop alcohol and drug
education and prevention programs. Five regional centers
provide training and technical assistance. For further
information on center services, contact the center in your
region:
Northeast Regional Center for Connecticut, Delaware, Maine,
Drug-Free Schools and Maryland, Massachusetts,
Communities New Hampshire, New Jersey,
12 Overton Ave. New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania
Sayville, NY 11782-0403 Rhode Island, Vermont
(516) 589-7022
Southeast Regional Center for Alabama,
Drug-Free Schools and District of Columbia, Florida,
Communities Georgia, Kentucky,
Spencerian Office Plaza North Carolina, Puerto Rico,
University of Louisville South Carolina, Tennessee,
Louisville, KY 40292 Virginia, Virgin Islands,
(502) 588-0052 West Virginia
FAX: (502) 588-1782
Midwest Regional Center for Indiana, Illinois,
Drug-Free Schools and Iowa, Michigan,
Communities Minnesota,
1900 Spring Road Missouri, Nebraska,
Oak Brook, IL 60521 North Dakota,
(708) 571-4710 South Dakota,
FAX: (708) 571-4718 Wisconsin
Southwest Regional Center Arizona, Arkansas,
for Drug-Free Schools and Colorado, Kansas,
Communities Louisiana, Mississippi,
555 Constitution Ave. New Mexico, Oklahoma,
Norman, OK 73037-0005 Texas, Utah
(405) 325-1454
(800) 234-7972 (outside Oklahoma)
Western Regional Center Alaska, California, Hawaii,
for Drug-Free Schools and Idaho, Montana, Nevada,
Communities Oregon, Washington, Wyoming,
101 S.W. Main St., Suite 500 American Samoa, Guam,
Portland, OR 97204 Northern Mariana Islands,
(503) 275-9480 and Republic of Palau
(800) 547-6339 (outside Oregon)
For general program information, contact the U.S.
Department of Education, Drug-Free Schools Staff, 400 Maryland
Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20202-6151. Telephone (202)
732-4599.
Drug-Free Schools and Communities--State and Local
Programs, U.S. Department of Education. This program provides
each State educational agency and Governor's office with funds
for alcohol and drug education and prevention programs in local
schools and communities. For information on contact persons in
your State, contact the U.S. Department of Education, Drug-Free
Schools Staff, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW, Washington, DC
20202-6151. Telephone (202) 732-4599.
Families in Action. This organization maintains a drug
information center with more than 200,000 documents. Publishes
Drug Abuse Update, a quarterly journal containing abstracts of
articles published in medical and academic journals and
newspapers. $25 for four issues. 2296 Henderson Mill Road,
Suite 204, Atlanta, GA 30345. Telephone (404) 934-6364.
"Just Say No" Clubs. These nationwide clubs provide
support and positive peer reinforcement to youngsters through
workshops, seminars, newsletters, walk-a-thons, and a variety
of other activities. Clubs are organized by schools,
communities, and parent groups. Just Say No Foundation, 1777 N.
California Boulevard, Suite 200, Walnut Creek, CA 94596.
Telephone 1-800-258-2766 or (415) 939-6666.
Narcotics Education, Inc. This organization publishes
pamphlets, books, teaching aids, posters, audiovisual aids, and
prevention magazines designed for classroom use: WINNER for
Preteens and LISTEN for teens. 6830 Laurel Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20012. Telephone 1-800-548-8700, or in the
Washington, DC area, call (202) 722-6740.
Parents' Resource Institute for Drug Education, Inc.
(PRIDE). This national resource and information center offers
consultant services to parent groups, school personnel, and
youth groups, and provides a drug-use survey service. It
conducts an annual conference; publishes a newsletter, a youth
group handbook, and other publications; and sells and rents
books, films, videos, and slide programs. Membership is $20.
The Hurt Building, 50 Hurt Plaza, Suite 210, Atlanta, GA 30303.
Telephone (404) 577-4500, 1-800-241-9746.
TARGET. Conducted by the National Federation of State High
School Associations, an organization of interscholastic
activities associations, TARGET offers workshops, training
seminars, and an information bank on chemical use and
prevention. It has a computerized referral service to substance
abuse literature and prevention programs. National Federation
of State High School Associations, 11724 Plaza Circle, P.O. Box
20626, Kansas City, MO 64195. Telephone (816) 464-5400.
Toughlove. This national self-help group for parents,
children, and communities emphasizes cooperation, personal
initiative, avoidance of blame, and action. It publishes a
newsletter, brochures, and books and holds workshops. P.O. Box
1069, Doylestown, PA 18901. Telephone 1-800-333-1069 or (215)
348-7090.
U.S. Clearinghouse. (A publication list is available on
request, along with placement on a mailing list for new
publications. Single copies are free.)
National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information (NCADI)
P.O. Box 2345
Rockville, MD 20852
(301) 468-2600
1-800-SAY-NOTO
NCADI combines the clearinghouse activities previously
administered by the National Institute on Alcoholism and
Alcohol Abuse and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The
Department of Education contributes to the support of the
clearinghouse, and provides anti-drug materials for free
distribution.
READINGS ON LEGAL ISSUES
Alexander, Kern, American Public School Law, 3d ed. St. Paul,
MN: West Publishing Company, 1992.
Rapp. J.A., Education Law, New York, NY: Matthew Bender and
Company, Inc., 1991. A comprehensive, frequently updated,
four-volume, looseleaf treatise on all issues of education law.
The Journal of Law and Education includes articles on education
issues and a section on recent developments in the law. It is
published quarterly by Jefferson Law Book Company, 2035 Redding
Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45202-1416.
Reutter, E. Edmund, The Law of Public Education, 3d ed.
Mineola, NY: Foundation Press, 1985.
School Law Bulletin is a quarterly magazine published by the
Institute of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330.
School Law News is a newsletter that describes recent
developments in the field. Capitol Publications, Inc., P.O. Box
1453, Alexandria, VA 22313-2053, Telephone (800) 327-7203.
The Schools and the Courts contains briefs of selected court
cases involving elementary and secondary schools. It is
published quarterly by College Administration Publications,
830-D Fairview Rd., P.O. Box 15898, Asheville, NC 28813-0898.
West's Education Law Reporter reprints the full text of Federal
and State education law cases. Also included are education
articles and comments selected from legal periodicals. West
Publishing Company, 610 Opperman Drive, P.O. Box 64526, St.
Paul, MN 55164-0526.
OTHER SOURCES OF MATERIALS ON LEGAL ISSUES
Council of School Attorneys, National School Boards
Association (NSBA), provides a national forum on the practical
legal problems faced by local public school districts and the
attorneys who serve them. NSBA conducts programs and seminars
and publishes monographs on a wide range of legal issues
affecting public school districts. 1680 Duke Street,
Alexandria, VA 22314, Telephone (703) 838-NSBA.
National Organization on Legal Problems of Education
(NOLPE) is a nonprofit, nonadvocacy organization that
disseminates information about current issues in school law.
NOLPE publishes newsletters, serials, books, and monographs on
a variety of school law topics; hosts seminars; and serves as a
clearinghouse for information on education law. 3601
SW 29th Street, Suite 223, Topeka, KS 66614. Telephone (913)
273-3550.
REFERENCES
Children and Drugs
Friedman, Alfred. "Does Drug and Alcohol Use Lead to Failure to
Graduate from High School?" Journal of Drug Education, Vol.
15(4), 1985.
Johnston, Lloyd D., Jerald G. Bachman, and Patrick M. O'Malley.
Monitoring the Future: Questionnaire Responses from the
Nation's High School Seniors. Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan, Institute for Social Research, 1987 (and unpublished
information).
Tobias, Joyce M. Kids and Drugs: A Handbook for Parents and
Professionals. Annandale, VA: PANDAA Press, 1986.
Youth and Alcohol
Alcohol Consumption and Related Problems. NIAAA, Alcohol and
Health Monograph 1, 1982.
Johnston, Lloyd D., Patrick M. O'Malley, and Jerald G. Bachman.
National Trends in Drug Use and Related Factors Among American
High School Students and Young Adults. NIDA, Department of
Health and Human Services, (ADM-87-1535), U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1987
Alcohol Topics: Fact Sheet, Alcohol and Youth. January 1987,
Rockville, MD. "Blood Alcohol Concentrations Among Young
Drivers, 1983." Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
33:699-701, 1984. National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug
Information.
Alcohol and Health VI. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism, Sixth Special Report to the U.S Congress on Alcohol
and Health, (ADM 87-1519) Rockville, MD.
Health, United States, 1980. National Center for Health
Statistics, (PHS 81-1232), December 1980.
"A Study of Children's Attitudes and Perceptions about Drugs
and Alcohol." Weekly Reader Publications. Middletown, CT. April
25, 1983.
National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information: "Fact
Sheet: Selected Statistics on Alcohol and alcoholism," June
1987. Rockville, MD.
DuPont, R.L. "Substance Abuse." Journal of the American Medical
Association, 254:16, October 25, 1985.
Kandel, D.B. "Epidemiological and Psychosocial Perspectives on
Adolescent Drug Use." Journal of the American Academy of Child
Psychology, 21(4):328-347, 1982.
Braucht, G.N. "Psychosocial Research on Teenage Drinking: Past
and Future," in Scarpitti, F.R. & S.K. Datesman, eds. Drugs and
the Youth Culture. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.,
1980.
Jenson, R. "Adolescent Problem Drinking: Psychosocial Aspects &
Developmental Outcomes in Proceedings." Collaborating Center
Designation Meeting & Alcohol Research Seminar, L.H. Towle, ed.
1985. (ADM 85-1730), Rockville, MD.
Extent of Alcohol and Other Drug Use
Johnston, Lloyd D., Jerald G. Bachman, and Patrick M. O'Malley.
Monitoring the Future: Questionnaire Responses from the
Nation's High School Seniors. Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan, Institute for Social Research, 1991 (and unpublished
information).
Johnston, Lloyd D., Patrick M. O'Malley, and Jerald G. Bachman.
Drug Use Among American High School Students, College Students,
and Other Young Adults: National Trends Through 1990.
Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1990 (and
unpublished information).
Miller, Judith D., Ira H. Cisin, and Herbert I. Abelson.
National Survey on Drug Abuse: Main Findings, 1982. Rockville,
MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1983 (ADM 83-1263).
Delinquency in the United States, 1982. Pittsburgh, PA:
National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, 1985.
Drug Problems in Japan. National Police Agency of Japan, 1985.
"Youth and Alcohol: A National Survey." U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General,
1991.
O'Malley, Patrick M., Jerald G. Bachman, and Lloyd D. Johnston.
"Student Drug Use in America: Differences Among High Schools."
Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan, Institute for Social
Research, unpublished preliminary draft.
Japan Statistics Yearbook, 1985. Tokyo: Statistics Bureau,
Management and Coordination Agency, 1985.
Washton, Arnold M. and Mark S. Gold. "Recent Trends in Cocaine
Abuse: A View from the National Hotline, 800-COCAINE ;" in
Advances in Alcohol and Substance Abuse, 1987.
How Drug Use Develops
Bolton, Iris M. "Educated Suicide Prevention." School Safety.
Spring 1986.
DuPont, Robert L. Getting Tough on Gateway Drugs. Washington,
DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1984.
Gold, Mark S., Linda Semlitz, Charles A. Dackis, and Irl
Extein. "The Adolescent Cocaine Epidemic." Seminars in
Adolescent Medicine, Vol. 1(4). New York, NY: Thieme, Inc.,
December 1985.
Holzman, David. "Crack Shatters the Cocaine Myth," and "Hot
Line Taking 1,200 Calls A Day." Insight. June 23, 1986.
Jaffe, Jerome H. "Testimony before Subcommittee on Children,
Family, Drugs, and Alcoholism," February 20, 1986. Washington,
DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1986.
Mann, Peggy. Marijuana Alert. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1985.
Mills, Carol J. and Harvey L. Noyes. "Patterns and Correlates
of Initial and Subsequent Drug Use Among Adolescents." Journal
of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 52(2), 1984.
Morganthau, Tom, Mark Miller, Janet Huck, and Jeanne DeQuinne.
"Kids and Cocaine." Newsweek, March 17, 1986.
Cocaine Addiction: It Costs Too Much. Rockville, MD: National
Institute on Drug Abuse, 1985.
Tobias, Joyce M. Kids and Drugs. Annandale, VA: PANDAA Press,
1986.
Weekly Reader Publications. The Weekly Reader National Survey:
Drugs and Drinking. Middletown, CT: Field Publications, 1987.
Effects of Drug Use
Deadwyler, Sam A. "Correlating Behavior with Neural Activity:
An Approach to Study the Action of Drugs in the Behaving
Animal. "Neuroscience Methods in Drug Abuse Research.
Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1985.
Mann, Peggy. Marijuana Alert. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1985.
Tobias, Joyce M. Kids and Drugs. Annandale, VA: PANDAA Press,
1986.
Drug Use and Learning
Friedman, Alfred. "Does Drug and Alcohol Use Lead to Failure to
Graduate from High School?" Journal of Drug Education, Vol.
15(4), 1985.
Johnston, Lloyd D. Jerald G. Bachman, and Patrick M. O'Malley.
Monitoring the Future: Questionnaire Responses from the
Nation's High School Seniors. Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan, Institute for Social Research, 1987 (and unpublished
information).
Niven, Robert G. "Marijuana in the School: Clinical Observation
and Needs." Marijuana and Youth. Rockville, MD: National
Institute on Drug Abuse, 1982.
Washton, Arnold M. and Mark S. Gold. "Recent Trends in Cocaine
Abuse: A View from the National Hotline, '800-COCAINE'," in
Advances in Alcohol and Substance Abuse, 1987.
What Parents Can Do
American Association of School Administrators and the Quest
National Center. Positive Prevention: Successful Approaches to
Preventing Youthful Drug and Alcohol Use. Arlington VA:
American Association of School Administrators, 1985.
Fraser, M. W., and J. D. Hawkins. Parent Training for
Delinquency Prevention: A Review. Seattle, WA: Center for Law
and Justice, University of Washington, 1982.
Manatt, Marsha. Parents, Peers, and Pot II. Rockville, MD:
National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1983.
Mann, Peggy. Marijuana Alert. New York. NY: McGraw-Hill, 1985.
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Drugs and the Family.
Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1981, (ADM
83-1151).
National Institute on Drug Abuse, Parents: What You Can De
About Drug Abuse--Get Involved. Rockville, MD: National
Institute on Drug Abuse, 1983 (ADM 84-1267).
Tobias, Joyce M. Kids and Drugs. Annandale, VA: Panda Press,
1986.
What Schools Can Do
Adams, Tom, with Bernard R. McColgan, Steven E. Gardner, and
Maureen E. Sullivan. Drug Abuse Prevention and the Schools.
Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, June 1984
(unpublished paper).
Assisting Athletes with Alcohol and Other Drug Problems.
Rockland, ME: State of Maine, March 1986.
Hampshire Informed Parents, Inc. "Evaluation of Drug
Literature." Amherst, MA: Hampshire Informed Parents, Inc.
Hawley, R. A A School Answers Back: Responding to Student Drug
Use. Rockville, MD: American Council for Drug Education, 1984.
Kennedy, Dorothy. "A Teacher Help Me Stop Drug Abuse." The
Executive Educator. October 1980, p. 23.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Prevention
Plus: Involving Schools, Parents, and the Community in Alcohol
and Drug Education. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1983 (ADM 83-1256).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Handbook for Prevention
Evaluation. Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse,
1981.
National School Boards Association. Resolutions of the NSBA.
Alexandria, VA: National School Boards Association, April 1986.
Pyramid Project. School Drug Policy. Berkeley, CA: Pacific
Institute for Research and Evaluation, July 1986.
The Rand Corporation. Teens in Action: Creating a Drug-Free
Future for America's Youth. Rockville, MD: National Institute
on Drug Abuse, 1985 (ADM 85-1376).
Rubel, Robert J. A Comprehensive Approach to Drug Prevention.
Austin, TX: National Alliance for Safe Schools, 1984.
South Dakota High School Activities Association. Chemical
Health-School Athletics and Fine Arts Activities. Pierre, SD:
South Dakota High School Athletics Association, 1968.
Strong, Gerald. "It's Time to Get Tough on Alcohol and Drug
Abuse in Schools," The American School Board Journal. February
1983.
U.S. Department of Justice. For Coaches Only: How to Start a
Drug Prevention Program. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration, 1984.
U.S. Department of Justice. Team Up for Prevention. Washington,
DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement
Administration, 1984.
What Communities Can Do
Blizard, R.A. and R.W. Teague. "Alternatives to Drug Use: An
Alternative Approach to Drug Education." The International
Journal of the Addictions, 1981, pp. 371-375.
Final Evaluation Report, 1984-85 Project DARE (Drug Abuse
Resistance Educational). Los Angeles, CA: Evaluation and
Training Institute, August 1985.
Manatt, Marsha. Parents, Peers, and Pot II. Rockville, MD:
National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1983.
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Preventing Adolescent Drug
Abuse: Intervention Strategies. Rockville, MD: National
Institute on Drug Abuse, 1983.
Teaching About Drug Prevention
Bausen, William B. and C. Kevin Molotte. Well and Good.
Hollywood, CA: Health Promotion Associates, 1984.
Ellickson, Phyllis L. and Gall Zellman. Adapting the Social
Influence Model to Drug Prevention: The Project Alert
Curriculum. Paper presented at annual meeting of the American
Public Health Association, Washington, DC: November 1985.
Project SMART. Los Angeles, CA: Health Behavior Research
Institute. University of Southern California, 1982.
Adolescent Peer Pressure. Rockville, MD: National Institute on
Drug Abuse, 1981 (ADM 84-1152).
Teaching Tools for Primary Prevention. Rockville, MD: National
Institute on Drug Abuse, December 1982 (unpublished paper).
New Hampshire State Department of Education. K-12 Guidelines
for School Preventive Drug Education. Concord, NH: State of New
Hampshire, 1979.
How the Law Can Help
1 Bethel School District v. Fraser, 418 U.S. 615,682 (1986).
2 New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 339 (1985).
3 2 J. Rapp, Education Law, 5 9.06[2] at 9-132 (1991).
4 See 21 U.S.C. 5 860.
5 See 21 U.S.C. 5 859.
6 See e.g., Zamora v. Pomeroy, 639 F.2d 662 (10th Cir. 1981)
(locker search conducted after trained police dog
indicated presence of marijuana inside).
7 See e.g., Horton v. Goose Creek Independent School
District, 690 F.2d 470, 476-77 (5th Cir. 1982) (en banc)
(citing cases and so holding), cert. denied, 463 U.S. 1207
(1983).
8 New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. at 343.
9 Id. at 340.
10 Id. at 345-48.
11 Bahr v. Jenkins, 539 F. Supp. 483,488 (E.D. Ky. 1982).
12 Martens v. District No. 220, 620 F. Supp. 29 (N.D. Ill.
1985).
13 See Horton v. Goose Creek Independent School District, 690
F.2d at 477 (1982); Jones v. Latexo Independent School,
499 F. Supp. 223 (E.D. Tex. 1980).
14 See Doe v. Renfrow, 475 F. Supp. 1012 (N.D. Ind. 1979),
aff'd in relevant part, 631 F.2d 91 (7th Cir.), cert.
denied, 451 U.S. 1022 (1981).
15 Horton v. Goose Creek Independent School District, 690
F.2d at 477.
16 Compare Odenheim v. Carlstadt-East Rutherford Regional
School District, 211 N.J. Super. 54, 10 A.2d 709 (1985)
and Anable v. Ford, 653 F. Supp. 22 (W.D. Ark.), modified,
663 F. Supp. 149 (W.D. Ark. 1985) (urinalysis not
permitted to screen public school students for drugs) with
Schaill v. Tijpecanoe, 679 F. Supp. 833 (N.D. Ind. 1988)
(upheld drug testing of interscholastic athletes in the
public school system), aft'd, 864 F.2d 1309 (7th Cir.
1988).
17 Bethel School District v. Fraser, 478 U.S. at 686.
18 Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565 (1975).
19 One of the leading cases is Dixon v. Alabama State Board
of Education, 294 F.2d 150 (5th Cir.), cert. denied. 368
U.S. 930 (1961).
20 See Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C.
55 1400-20, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, 29 U.S.C. 5 794.
21 See generally 20 U.S.C. 5 1232g and 34 C.F.R. Part 99.
22 The term education records is defined as records that are
directly related to a student and maintained by or for the
education agency or institution. The term does not include
certain records maintained by a separate law enforcement
unit of an education agency.
23 FERPA permits a school to disclose information from
education records to its own officials (including
teachers) who have a legitimate educational interest in
the information. A school may determine in its FERPA
policy that one such interest is the need to decide on the
appropriateness of discipline.
24 An eligible student is a student who is 18 or older or
attending an institution of postsecondary education.
25 See Board of Education v. McCluskey, 458 U.S. 966, 970-71
(1982) (per curiam); see also Tarter v. Raybuck, 742 F.2d
977, 983 (6th Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 470 U.S. 1051
(1985).
26 See Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800 (1982); Wood v.
Strickland, 420 U.S. 308 (1975). Under these cases,
officials will be immune from personal liability so long
as their conduct does not violate clearly established
constitutional or Federal statutory rights of which a
reasonable person should have known.
27 Memphis Community School District v. Stachura, 477 U.S.
299 (1986).
28 Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247 (1978).
Specific Drugs and Their Effects
Drug Enforcement Administration. Drugs of Abuse. Washington,
DC, 1985.
Mann, Peggy. Pot Safari: A Visit to the Top Marijuana Research
in the U.S. New York, NY: Woodmere Press, 1985.
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Cocaine Use in America:
Epidemiologic and Clinical Perspectives. National Institute on
Drug Abuse, 1985, (ADM 85-1414).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Drug Abuse and Drug Abuse
Research. 1984, (ADM 85-1372).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Hallucinogens and PCP. 1983,
(ADM 83-1306).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Inhalants. 1983 (ADM
83-1307).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Marijuana. 1983 (ADM
83-1307).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA Capsules, various
issues.
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Opiates. 1984 (ADM 84-1308).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Phencyclidine: An Update.
(ADM 86-1443).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Sedative-Hynotics. 1984 (ADM
84-1309).
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Stimulants and Cocaine. 1984
(ADM 84-1304).
Newsweek. March 17, 1986, page 58.
Tobias, Joyce. Kids and Drugs: A Handbook for Parents and
Professionals. Annandale, VA: PANDAA Press, May 1986.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The following employees of the U.S. Department of
Education assisted in the preparation of this volume and
previous editions:
Beverley Blondell Adriana de Kanter
Henry Bretzfield Amy Katz
Ron Bucknam Kim Light
Judith Cherrington John Mason
Mari Colvin Ross McNutt
Maura Daly Val Plisko
Elizabeth Farquhar Sandra Richardson
Jaime Fernandez Loretta Riggans
Margaret Guenther Deborah Rudy
Charlotte Gillespie Daniel Schecter
Alan Ginsburg Amy L. Schwartz
Wilma Green Barbara Vespucci
Dick Hays John Walters
Gregory Henschel Sherry Weissman
Daphne Kaplan Valerie Wood
Assistance was also provided by staff from the National
Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, the National
Institute on Drug Abuse, and by consultants Elizabeth S.
McConnell and Joel M. Moskowitz.
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