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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: OPED: The Problem Isn't Yearbooks; It's Drug Use
Title:US CO: OPED: The Problem Isn't Yearbooks; It's Drug Use
Published On:2007-05-30
Source:Canyon Courier (CO)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 04:56:39
THE PROBLEM ISN'T YEARBOOKS; IT'S DRUG USE

By now everyone has heard about the brouhaha over the Conifer High
School yearbook and the pages that depict students using alcohol and
illegal drugs. Some parents are up in arms, even going so far to as
to demand the resignation of Amy McTague, an English teacher and
yearbook adviser.

Those parents need to calm down and hear what principal Pat Termin
said in a High Timber Times article. After admitting that the
material was indefensible and should not have been included in the
year book, she asked: "When are we going to leave the yearbook behind
and go to the conversations that really need to happen about helping
more kids make better choices?"

A study done several years ago showed that 25 to 28 percent of
10th-graders at Conifer used marijuana and/or alcohol. For
upperclassmen, I wouldn't be surprised to find that figure to be
higher, nor would I be surprised to find far higher levels of drug
use in other schools.

To my way of thinking, the students who produced the yearbook and
those who were quoted about the use of drugs and alcohol didn't think
twice about the matter. That alone speaks volumes about the use of
drugs and alcohol in Conifer High School, and I can tell you, that
fine school is not the exception. It is the rule.

The fact that kids are using dangerous drugs like alcohol and
cigarettes is of far more concern than a few kids depicting it in a
yearbook.

But in one sense, this is not a school issue as much as it's a parent
issue. It's easy to fix an oversight in a yearbook. (A list of
solutions was offered by the school.) It's not so easy to get kids to
change their ways. But I know this: We parents frequently count on
the schools to fix problems with our kids that we cannot or will not
fix, so chances are that it will fall into the school's lap.
Nonetheless, it will take schools and parents working together to
make even a whit of a difference.

McTague and Termin have apologized enough. Now is the time to attack
the real problem and it's not about yearbooks.
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