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Busted: Students at Xavier College, where parents pay more than $15,000 in fees for VCE students, were told about the incident at year-level assemblies.
墨尔本著名的私立学校Xavier College也不遑多让,爆出学生吸食贩售大麻等毒品大案,登上了本地报纸头版头条。
Xavier College drug bust
April 11, 2007 12:00am Article from: Herald-Sun
AN exclusive private school has been rocked by a drug scandal that has led to the expulsion of one student and the suspension of three others.
Xavier College was forced to expel a year 11 student for selling marijuana in the school yard.
Another three pupils were suspended after admitting they bought the drug from the student.
Two of the suspended teenagers will return to school at the beginning of next term, on Monday.
It is believed the expelled teenager has already been enrolled at another school.
Staff at Xavier decided not to go to police over the incident, instead referring the students concerned for counselling.
Students at the independent Catholic school, where parents pay more than $15,000 in fees for VCE students, were told about the incident at year-level assemblies.
Xavier deputy head Dominic Calipari yesterday confirmed that a year 11 student had been expelled in late February.
But Mr Calipari denied there had been a cover-up.
Otherwise, he said, "we wouldn't have gone to each year level and made it public".
But Opposition education spokesman Philip Davis said any school authorities who were aware of drug-selling in the school were obliged to report it to police.
"Schools have a duty of care to children," Mr Davis said.
"And there should be no other policy than zero tolerance regarding drugs."
Police yesterday declined to comment until they had full details of the drug incident.
Mr Calipari said some students came forward in February concerned that a student was selling marijuana.
"I approached the individual and he acknowledged it," he said.
"He admitted it to me when I asked him . . . and he actually brought me two samples."
Mr Calipari said the student, believed to be 16, knew the school's strict drug policy.
"He said he was happy to accept the punishment," the deputy head said.
But Mr Calipari said the teenager was unwilling to name any other students who bought the drug as he did not want to "dob in his mates".
The deputy head said the names of the three students who bought the marijuana were obtained from other students.
He said the three admitted buying the drug and were suspended for up to three weeks.
"They made admissions," Mr Calipari said.
He said that one student said he had not used it, while another had admitted to smoking it in his back yard.
Mr Calipari said the school believed it had taken the best course of action.
"It was just important to get the parents in and talk about the future (of the student)," he said.
"And we thought the appropriate thing was to go to our school population."
The deputy head said Xavier provided drug education in both religious studies and health and human development classes.
Mr Calipari said the incident had come as a surprise.
"I have been teaching for 30 years and been deputy head for 10 years, and I was of the opinion that drug selling in schools . . . was dying out," he said.
"I knew him personally and he always says good morning.
"I think at the end of the day, the parents of this boy understood that it was good for them to be aware of it so they can put in preventative measures."
The Herald Sun revealed in October that Geelong Grammar had suspended a dozen students for underage drinking.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun ... 1536195-661,00.html |
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