Essay On High School Drug Testing

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With statistics reported that 34% of students subjected to drug testing admit their intentions to continue use of substance(s), it isn’t difficult to come to the conclusion that drug testing of high school students genuinely doesn’t do anything (“The Effectiveness of…”). The effectiveness of high school drug testing, a subject matter labeled ineffective, when in reality the drug testing program currently accomplishes what is was intended to. The implementation of a drug testing program in a school facility initiates both immediate and long term effects. Student substance use and abuse has decreased, and will continue to decline, through the long term prevention implemented through random drug testing of students in a school corporation. Drug testing in a high school can be conducted through two different systems, reasonable cause/suspicion testing, …show more content…

Also over the last 15 years, the amount of high school student drug testing programs implemented has significantly increased (Ringwalt). This change in student drug use isn’t drastic, or even very obvious to much of the public. What most people are unaware of is the actual intentions of high school drug testing, and how these goals are intended to be met through the drug testing programs in use. Threats of testing students will not keep them from using illicit substances. Although the drug testing system does serve as a slight deterrent to some student mentally debating use. The drug testing system was not designed to be threats alone, but rather a process school corporations will follow. Through a school's ability to hinder a student's participation in activities with positive results of a drug test, a student's drug use is likely to be reduced some extent. Awareness of the issue of student substance use is made known, as the consequences are witnessed. This allows for long term effects of the system to take