Backlash forms against 'zero tolerance'
By RAY HENRY, Associated Press Writer Fri Jun 15, 1:06 PM ET
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Fifth-graders in California who adorned their mortarboards with tiny toy plastic soldiers this week to support troops in
Iraq were forced to cut off their miniature weapons. A Utah boy was suspended for giving his cousin a cold pill prescribed to both students. In Rhode Island, a kindergartner was suspended for bringing a plastic knife to school so he could cut cookies.
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It's all part of "zero tolerance" rules, which typically mandate severe punishments for weapons and drug offenses regardless of the circumstances.
Lawmakers in several states say the strict policies in schools have resulted in many punishments that lack common sense, and are seeking to loosen the restrictions.
"A machete is not the same as a butter knife. A water gun is not the same as a gun loaded with bullets," said Rhode Island state Sen. Daniel Issa, a former school board member who worries that no-tolerance rules are applied blindly and too rigidly.
Issa sponsored a bill requiring school districts to decide punishments for alcohol, drug and non-firearm weapon violations on a case-by-case basis after weighing the circumstances. It passed the Senate and House and now heads for the governor's desk.
Some have long been aware of the problems of zero tolerance. For the last decade, Mississippi has allowed local school districts to reduce previously mandatory one-year expulsions for violence, weapons and drug offenses.
More recently, Texas lawmakers have also moved to tone down their state's zero-tolerance rules. Utah altered its zero-tolerance policy on drugs so asthmatic students can carry inhalers. The American Bar Association has recommended ending zero-tolerance policies, while the American Psychological Association wants the most draconian codes changed.
"It may be a bit of self-correction that you're beginning to see where the pendulum is coming back," said Kathy Christie, vice president of a research clearinghouse for Education Commission of the States in Denver.
A decade ago, more than three-quarters of public schools surveyed reported adopting some version of a no-tolerance policy, according to the U.S.
Department of Education.
"Zero tolerance" became a popular political buzzword during the waning days of the Reagan administration's "War On Drugs," and the rules spread rapidly after a series of high-profile school shootings, according to a report issued last year by the American Psychological Association.
A 1997 survey of more than 1,200 public schools by the U.S. Department of Education found that 79 percent had zero-tolerance policies against violence, 88 percent for drugs, 91 percent for weapons and 94 percent for firearms.
Some parents have mixed feelings about zero-tolerance rules. Christine Duckworth, 50, is the mother of an 18-year-old daughter who just graduated Portsmouth High School in Rhode Island, which has a zero-tolerance policy.
Duckworth said she wanted her daughter safe at school, but she said rules must reflect that teenagers make mistakes.
"I think there's pretty much always a gray area," she said. "You're dealing with individuals. How can you possibly apply one law to every single person and their circumstances?"
There are some signs that policies could be changing.
Texas decided in 2005 that schools can consider students' intent and other mitigating factors before punishing them for any offenses other than those involving firearms, and Rep. Rob Eissler said he wants the weighing of those factors to be mandatory.
"It's hard to legislate common sense," he said. "If we get intent into part of the code, I think we'll be in good shape."
Critics of zero-tolerance rules cite multiple problems. Academic achievement often lags in schools with the highest rates of suspension and expulsion, even when socio-economic factors are taken into consideration, said Cecil Reynolds, chairman of the APA's Zero Tolerance Taskforce.
"The kids feel like they're walking on egg shells," he said.
Reynolds also questioned what lessons zero-tolerance rules teach, citing reports that a 10-year-old girl was expelled from a Colorado academy after giving a teacher a small knife her mother placed in her lunchbox.
"What she learned from the school was, 'If something happens and you break a rule, for God's sake, don't tell anybody,'" Reynolds said. "Zero-tolerance policies completely ignore the concept of intent, which is antithetical to the American philosophy of justice."
The principal at Portsmouth High School in Rhode Island — whose mascot is sometimes depicted carrying a rifle — censored a yearbook photo because it showed a student who enjoys medieval reenactments wearing chainmail and holding a sword.
Citing the cost of litigation, the school relented this year and recently published in the yearbook graduate Patrick Agin's senior photo showing him with the sword.
Agin said he understands rules against guns and drugs, but he was perplexed about how school administrators drew distinctions in his case. He never brought the sword to school.
"You can't really have a zero tolerance," he said. "We have track and field. We throw javelins. If you think about it, you can pretty much make anything into a weapon."
5 comments:
Took long enough. Zero tolerance was as dumb in the 80's as it is now.
Yes zero tolerance is an extreme, but then I'd bet those in favor of eradicating it have never been on hall duty in a middle school... thanks to the fact that I wear glasses I didn't lose an eye when one young man whipped off his belt and swung it using the belt buckle as a weapon! Those large buckles and rings aren't merely fashion accessories - they're being used as weapons... wise up!
As for returning decorum to graduation - why should one families right be greater than the families who came to see their child GRADUATE, not be part of a pep rally! That's not a court case - that's manners and common sense!
anonymous - There's a difference between students using something as a weapon, and bringing a plastic knife to school to cut cookies. As the article said, intent needs to figure in, which is why zero tolerance policies are inherently flawed.
Also, the issue with the stuff at graduation (besides the fact that fifth graders don't need a graduation, but that's just my opinion) wasn't that some families didn't like the alterations made, but that the toy soldiers on the hats had miniature pretend guns, which they were required to remove. And even at a high school graduation, students are sometimes allowed to decorate their caps if they wish; that doesn't make it any less formal, or any sort of a "pep rally", especially if all their doing is showing support for their country (something that becomes more common with younger grades).
Zero tolerance is just an excuse to justify the laziness and stupidity of school administrators who would have to otherwise make decisions based on a case by case situation. This way everything is judged by the 'blanket statement' no matter how ridiculous, so they don't have to stop and think about the merits of each case. They are able to hide behind the lack of accountability of each decision. Now because of stupid zero tolerance laws, our very high property tax money used here for school districts are used up every time someone takes the zero tolerance judgements to court--and with reason. There have been some stupid zero tolerance punishments. Zero tolerance laws need to be abolished and our administrators we pay should have to use their heads and actually decide which things merit punishment and which are so ridiculously stupid that they don't!!
Tolerance increasing usa,most of having weapons,this may cause to effect with normal citizens,to control the tolerance is responsible for government..
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