In yet another story about how school administrators can't use their common sense in trying to discipline students, here is
the story of a Virginia teenager who got a two-week suspension for having birth control pills at school despite the fact that the pills were prescribed by a doctor and her mother knew about them.
For two decades, many schools have set zero-tolerance policies on drugs. That means no over-the-counter drugs, no prescription drugs, no pretend drugs in student lockers or pockets. When many teens have ready access to medicine cabinets filled with prescription medications such as Xanax and Vicodin, any capsule or tablet is suspect.
Still, some parents and civil rights advocates say enforcement has been overzealous. Stringent rules have ensnared not only drug dealers and abusers, but a host of sniffling and headachy students seeking quick medical relief. The Supreme Court will consider this month the case of a 13-year-old Arizona student who was strip-searched in 2003 by an administrator who suspected that she was carrying ibuprofen pills.
Fairfax School Board members have debated over time whether to allow students to carry Tylenol or other over-the-counter medicines without registering them with the school nurse. County policy permits cough drops to be carried on campus, for instance, but not shared. Arlington County policies permit high school students to carry over-the-counter pain relievers. A 2006 state law in Maryland overturned some local rules requiring a doctor's note for children to use sunscreen at school.
In Virginia, school systems must comply with state code regarding prescription medications and illegal drugs on campus. Students face expulsion if they bring to school any "controlled substance" or addictive drug regulated by the federal government. "Imitation controlled substances," which could include virtually any prescription pill, are subject to the same hefty repercussions. Local school boards can give a lighter punishment after a review.
Instead of targeting regulations at the real problem - students sharing medications, school administrators figure that they might as well ban everything. And just as they don't believe that students can exercise discretion in taking their own medications, the administrators demonstrate that they themselves can't exercise any sort of discretion in deciding penalties for transgressors. So we get these sorts of silly results.
During two weeks of watching television game shows and trying to keep up with homework online, the Fairfax teen, an honor student and lettered athlete, had time to study the handbook closely. If she had been caught high on LSD, heroin or another illegal drug, she found, she would have been suspended for five days. Taking her prescribed birth-control pill on campus drew the same punishment as bringing a gun to school would have.
5 comments:
I'm so glad the people that enacted these laws have our children in their hands.
Show me a zero tolerance policy and I will show you a bureaucrat who is unwilling to use any judgement.
Rick
So why was it necessary for the kid to bring her birth control pills to school?
Why couldn't she follow the rule, and leave them at home?
I agree with Jaw Bone here. In my district prescription drugs without prior approval by the district and the principal are grounds for suspension and often getting to sit in a Dean's office in handcuffs for a while.
The second day of school we had a girl that was passing out which she claimed were aspirin, she also had a note from her mother and her family physician recommending a dosage schedule. The problem was that they were ecstasy pills reshaped and dyed to resemble aspirin. She is now in the continuation school but still sneaks onto campus periodically.
Jaw Bone,
Damn...you've finally said something that makes sense. Have you taken your medication?
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