An
Orwellian solution to kids skipping school
Atlanta Journal-Constitution | Feb. 19,
2007
By COURTLAND MILLOY
Let's say your teenager is a
habitual truant and there is nothing you can do about it. A
Washington area politician thinks he might have the solution: Fit
the child with a Global Positioning System chip, then have police
track him down.
"It allows them to get caught
easier," said Maryland Delegate Doyle Niemann (D-Prince George's),
who recently co-sponsored legislation in the House that would use
electronic surveillance as part of a broader truancy reduction plan.
"It's going to be done unobtrusively. The chips are tiny and can be
put into a hospital ID band or a necklace."
Excuse me. But that is obscene.
Electronic monitoring is used by criminal court judges to keep track
of felons. Researchers use them to track the movements of wild
animals. Let parents use such devices if they must. But that's no
way for government to treat a child.
Niemann's legislation mirrors a
bill sponsored by state Sen. Gwendolyn Britt (D-Prince George's).
Both would provide truants and their parents with better access to
social services, such as mental health evaluations and help with
schoolwork. Electronic monitoring would be a last resort. Still, the
prospect of tagging children and using them in some "catch and
release" hunt by police casts a pall over everything that's good
about the plan.
All of this is because about 6,800
students in suburban Prince George's County (out of a total 134,000)
missed 20 to 35 days of school in 2005, and an additional 5,800
missed 36 days or more. A problem? Yes. Bad enough to use an
Orwellian quick fix? No way. Besides, is there no end to this
fiddling with mere symptoms?
Stephanie Joseph, a member of the
board of ACLU of Maryland who testified against the bill at a recent
Senate committee hearing, correctly observed that "it really doesn't
address truancy and its root causes." Even as Niemann and other
lawmakers seek to rustle up students and herd them back to school,
school officials are kicking them out by the score. More than 4,300
county students were suspended at least twice during the 2005-06
school year; 480 of them, five or more times. You can imagine what
all of that confusion might look like on a GPS monitor: satellite
images of dots streaming in one school door and back out through
another.
Perhaps most distressing is the
number of students who stay in school only until age 16, when they
can legally drop out. Enrollment figures show that, during any given
year, roughly 14,000 students are in ninth grade. By 12th grade, the
number drops to 8,000.
"We need to take a look at the
whole system," Niemann said. "We want to know why students drop out
and if we are preparing them for the world they live in. But there
is a limit to what you can do."
Odd how billions and billions of
dollars keep going to a war that almost nobody wants but there's
never enough to fund the educational programs that nearly everybody
says are needed. Aimed solely at students in Prince George's — the
only predominantly black county in the Washington area — the truancy
effort is called a "pilot program," a first-of-its-kind experiment.
It would cost $400,000 to keep track of about 660 students a year.
Surely that money could be better
spent. Take one example: In nearby Montgomery County, kindergarten
teacher Kathleen Cohan noticed that 5-year-old children of affluent
parents were entering her school knowing about 13,000 English words,
while children from poor and immigrant families knew as few as 500.
So she and other teachers came up with a plan to close the gap. And
it worked. Between 2002 and 2005, the percentage of low-income
kindergartners reaching first grade soared from 44 percent in 2002
to 70 percent in 2005.
Now that's a pilot program. Invest
in something like that and you might find more students becoming
eager to attend school.
Niemann notes that the law
requires students to attend school — period. "Where do you lodge
responsibility for school attendance: with the parent and child, or
society?" he asked. "If you say that the school system has to do
blank this and blank that before holding parents and students
accountable, that's a dead end. That's just making excuses for
unacceptable behavior."
But maintaining a school system
that is among the worst in the state ought to be unacceptable, too.
Maybe county officials should be monitored to see why they aren't
showing up for work.
• Courtland Milloy is a Washington
Post columnist. His column appears occasionally.
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