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UK: First state school agrees to random drug testing

Alison Gordon

Sunday Telegraph

Sunday 28 Mar 2004

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A comprehensive school in Kent is to become the first state school to
introduce random drug tests.

The Abbey School in Faversham will begin testing its 960 pupils from
September after parents supported the move in a consultation exercise this
month.

Other comprehensives are now expected to follow suit. The Abbey School's
decision comes after a call in February by Tony Blair for schools to adopt
random tests. "We can't force them to do it but if heads believe they have
a problem in their school, then they should be able to do random
drug-testing," he said.

The urine tests will be carried out by a member of the school nursing
service or a registered nurse hired from outside the school. Pupils who
test positive will be offered counselling and an enforced programme of drug
education. If they fail more than one test and show themselves to be
persistent offenders they will face expulsion.

Peter Walker, the school's headteacher, said: "I see this as the best
available form of drug-abuse prevention. This school has no greater drug
problem than any other, but we are determined to stamp it out altogether.
If someone is found to have taken drugs they will be given help to prevent
the problem getting worse."

Mr Walker said that although no parent would be forced to give consent for
their child to be tested, he had been impressed by the strong support for
his proposal. "We have written to all parents, governors and teachers and
there has been a positive reaction," he said.

The Abbey School's action follows the expulsion of a pupil last month for
possessing cannabis. The teenager took a cannabis cigarette into the
school, which he was encouraging other pupils to try.

Lesley Temple, a mother of three who has a 15-year-old boy at Abbey School,
said: "We have all got to get together to fight drugs. Random urine testing
will act as a huge deterrent."

Teaching unions are divided over the merits of random testing. David Hart,
the general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers,
supports the idea, but other unions think that testing will be ineffective
and unworkable if parents refuse consent.

There have also been claims by some lawyers and academics that drug testing
could infringe pupils' human rights, although the Government has rejected
this. It believes that schools are entitled to ask parents to agree to drug
tests in return for giving them a place and that this consent is sufficient
to make testing legal.

Many independent schools already have a random drug testing policy. They
include Eton, Marlborough, Gordonstoun, Winchester College and Sevenoaks.
Fettes College in Edinburgh, the independent school at which Mr Blair was
educated, also carries out random drug tests.


 

 

 

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