Smoky Mountains Sunrise

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Shocking School Drug And Gang Survey


Yet another reason no parent should be compelled to send their children to government schools simply because they cannot afford alternatives. A parent facing schools like these should be able to take their child's share of education funding and seek alternatives, where their child can learn and good character can be formed. That is in the public interest, failed and dangerous public schools are not.

From MyFoxNY
By Luke Funk

A
new survey claims that 27 percent of public school students aged 12 to 17 attend schools that are both gang and drug-infected. That means 5.7 million students attend schools which are both gang and drug dominated.

Nearly 50 percent of all public school students report drug use or sales on school grounds.

The Columbia University survey claims that one in three middle schoolers say that drugs are used, kept or sold at their school. That number is up 39 percent in the past year.

The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) survey compared to teens attending gang and drug-free schools, teens who attend schools infected with both gangs and drugs.

It found that teens who attend schools with drug and gang problems are five times likelier to use marijuana and three times likelier to drink.

"The combination of gangs and drugs in a school is a malignant cancer that must be eliminated if we are to be able to improve public education in our nation," said Joseph A. Califano, Jr., CASA Founder and Chairman and former U.S. Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare.

The survey found that 66 percent of high school students said their schools were drug infected, continuing a stead increase in drug-infected high schools since 2006 when 51 percent of high school students said that they attended drug-infected schools.

The complete survey findings were to be released at a conference in Washington, D.C.

The survey also found that the drug-free-school gap between public schools and private and religious schools is up sharply in the past decade.

This is the 15th annual teen survey of attitudes on substance abuse among teenagers.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

One of the most insightful, albeit politicaly incorrect, books out there on public education is Robert Weissberg's "Bad Students Not Bad Schools" (2010).

Read it if you have no fear of reality.



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