JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
I have this basic conflict when I struggle with the zero-tolerance --
and, more recently, the “bullying” -- policies of the Newport-Mesa School
Board. On the one hand, I am viscerally opposed to any rigid system of
alleged justice in which individual circumstances are considered -- if at
all -- only after instant punishment is delivered. And, on the other
hand, I have a good deal of respect for the majority decisions of the
local school board, which makes me wonder how the members could be so
wrongheaded on zero tolerance.
The only way I knew to resolve the conflict was to ask that question
directly, which is why I met last week for an hour and a half with School
Board President Dana Black. I came away from that session with my mind
changed on some points and not on others. But mostly I clarified some
perceptions that were either fuzzy or just plain wrong.
Although it seems a little silly, anyone challenging the board’s
recent actions in these areas feels compelled to assert up front that he
is dead set, without equivocation, against drugs, alcohol, weapons and
bullying on any school campus. And so I hereby declare myself. But
declaring oneself against evil isn’t the issue. Rather, the issue is
whether or not there are more positive than negative results from the
actions taken by the Newport-Mesa School Board to deal with these evils.
The most important point clarified for me was that Newport-Mesa isn’t
ploughing any new ground here. Both the zero-tolerance and bullying
policies are set forth in the California Education Code. The Newport-Mesa
resolutions are picked up verbatim from that code.
But setting policy is only half the story. The other -- and, perhaps,
more important -- half is how those policies are to be enforced. This is
the area in which school districts differ -- and where I have some
problems with our school board. It is also important to point out that
there are two quite different procedures being followed in Newport-Mesa
to enforce the drug, alcohol and weapons policy as opposed to the
bullying policy.
In the first instance, Black explained, the enforcement is punitive, a
consequence of the student’s actions. In the second, it empowers school
officials to support the rights of the kids by being able to tell parents
there is a problem and bringing focus to it.
She assured me that Newport-Mesa’s enforcement of the California
student behavior code (known as 4210) relating to drugs, alcohol and
firearms is not as draconian as I have described it. The parents of the
student seen violating this code are called and the student --
accompanied by a school staff person -- is immediately sent home and
suspended. If the parents request it, a hearing is held with witnesses.
If the panel conducting the hearing finds extenuating circumstances, the
student is returned to the former school. If not, the student is
transferred to another school. The decision of the hearing panel can be
appealed to the School Board. The only time this process is not followed
is if the student violates the procedure, as happened, says Black, in the
Ryan Huntsman case three years ago.
I have two problems with this. First, I question the policy of dealing
with all alleged violations by immediate suspension. This leads to the
absurdity of identical treatment for a male student with an AK47 in his
school locker and one who comes to school with a tiny pencil sharpener
shaped like a gun in his back pack. Or the woman student who turns up
drunk in a PE class and the girl who takes a sip of champagne offered
after a soccer game by the mother of a friend. School administrators
should be allowed some slack in dealing with such polar opposite
violations.
The second is the immediate transfer of students deemed to have
violated the drug and weapons code. This makes very little sense to me.
If the only intent, as Black said, is punishment, then two questions need
to be asked: Does the punishment in any manner fit the crime? And who is
being punished more, the guilty student or the student’s parents who must
adjust to this lifestyle change and the guilty party’s new fellow
students?
The First Amendment objections of Wendy Leece to the policy on
bullying are about as reasonable to me as using the same argument against
her efforts to deny students the right to study books she deems
inappropriate. My concerns in trying to codify bullying are quite
different. My first question is how on earth can we define it? But I
suppose my biggest problem is generational. When I was growing up and
during my years in the military, it never occurred to us to turn to
authority to settle personal problems. We learned, often the hard way,
how to settle them ourselves. It makes me extremely uneasy to see this
responsibility routinely turned over to third parties.
“It’s a very different world out there from the one in which you were
raised,” Black said. “Our policy in enforcing the bullying code grew out
of a long process in which parents, teachers and students were all deeply
involved. It’s intent is not punishment but intervention. We need the
rules to enable us to step in and talk to the parents and support the
kids. We recognize in all of these instances that every student in every
situation is unique.”
So we end up with earnest and thoughtful people searching for
reasonable and effective means of dealing with problems exacerbated by
random acts of violence by unstable young people with a growing access to
military-type guns. In such a climate, overreaction can be as
counterproductive as the other extreme.
My 17-year-old grandson, Trent, who is visiting this week to have a
look at colleges hereabouts, read this column over my shoulder as I wrote
it. He tells me there are similar zero-tolerance disputes in his high
school community in Boulder, Colo. He thinks the policy has helped in
controlling some of the problems it was designed for, but he too is
uneasy about the inequity of the same punishment for quite different
levels of crime. And he strongly questions the portrayal of
out-of-control schools.
If he is an example of what our public schools are producing these
days, then I can guarantee you that we’re a lot better off than we think.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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