No Child Left Alone
By Military Recruiters
by Leah C Wells*, December 6, 2002
Published by CommonDreams.org
The No Child Left Behind Act which went into effect
last week has some surprising implications for high school students.
Buried deep within the funding benefits is Section 9528 which
grants the Pentagon access to directories with students names,
addresses and phone numbers so that they may be more easily contacted
and recruited for military service. Prior to this provision, one-third
of the nation's high schools refused recruiters' requests for
students' names or access to campus because they believed it was
inappropriate for educational institutions to promote military
service.
This portion of the Department of Education's initiative
to create better readers, testers and homework-doers is a departure
from the previously federally guaranteed privacy protections students
have traditionally known. Until now, schools have been explicitly
instructed to protect the integrity of students' information -
even to guard students' private information from college recruiters.
Students must consent to releasing their personal data when they
take college entrance exams.
However, since September 11th , educational institutions
have slid down the slippery slope in doling out student information
when solicited by the FBI and now the Pentagon. Only one university
- Earlham in Indiana - declined to release student data when approached
after the terrorist attacks last fall.
The No Child Left Behind act paves the way for
the military to have unimpeded access to underage students who
are ripe for solicitation for the military. This blatant contradiction
of prior federal law is not only an invasion of students' privacy
but an assault on their educational opportunities as well. Too
many students are lulled by the siren songs of military service
cooing promises of funding for higher education. Too many students
have fallen between the cracks due to underfunded educational
programs, underresourced schools and underpaid teachers. They
are penalized in their educational opportunities for the systemic
failure to put our money where our priorities ought to be: in
schools.
It is critical that students, schools and school
districts have accurate information regarding this No Child Left
Behind Act in preparation for the forthcoming military solicitation.
First, the Local Educational Agency (LEA), not individual schools,
may grant dissemination of student information. When recruiters
approach individual schools, the administration should refer them
to the school district office where they are supposed to visit
in the first place.
In some cases, the recruiters on site have coerced
employees at individual schools to sign previously prepared documents
stating that in refusing to release student information, they
are not in compliance with the No Child Left Behind Act and risk
losing federal funding. All requests for student information should
be referred to the school district's office and not left to the
discretion of individual school employees. School boards, Parent-Teacher
Organizations and Student Council/ASB groups can mobilize to support
the administrations who are not willing to distribute private
student information.
Second, students or their parents may opt themselves
out of this recruitment campaign. So as not to be in violation
of the previous federal law which restricts disclosure of student
information, the LEA must notify parents of the change in federal
policy through an addendum to the student handbook or individual
letters sent to students' homes. Parents and students can notify
their school administration and district in writing of their desire
to have their records kept secret.
The San Francisco School District has maintained
a policy of non-recruitment by the military and is leading the
nation in their efforts to educate parents and students on their
right to privacy. As advocates for their students, the district
is sending home individual letters to parents outlining their
options for protecting their child's information.
At the heart of this argument over students' records
and privacy is the true purpose and meaning of education. Is the
goal of education to provide a fertile field of students ripe
for the picking by the military which will send them to the front
lines of battle, potentially never to return? Is the essence of
education to dichotomize the availability of quality education
between those with ample finances and those with no financial
mobility?
Or is education meant to develop students' minds,
hearts and talents through self-discovery and academic exploration?
Does education aim to promote critical thinking skills, empathy
for others, understanding of individual roles in community service,
and a sense of global connectedness? Was education designed to
be an equitable opportunity for all students?
A newspaper from the U.K., The Scotsman, recently
interviewed a young American woman on an aircraft carrier in the
Middle East. Eighteen-year-old Karen de la Rosa said, "I
have no idea what is happening. I just hear the planes launching
above my head and pray that no one is going to get killed. I keep
telling myself I'm serving my country."
But is her country serving her?
The relationship between militarism and education
is evident. The current Department of Education budget proposal
for 2003 is $56.5 billion. The recently-approved Department of
Defense budget is $396 billion, nearly seven times what is allocated
for education, and more than three times the combined military
budgets of Russia, China, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, Libya, Cuba,
Sudan and Syria. An escalated war in Iraq could add more than
$200 billion to the defense budget as well.
Students are continually guilted into shouldering
the burden of responsibility when they do not succeed in school
and all too often accept as inevitable their fate of being sucked
into military service. The Leave No Child Behind Act is a wake
up call to students to reclaim their privacy, to reinvest their
energy into demanding quality education and to remind their leaders
that stealing money from education to pay for military is unacceptable.
*Leah C. Wells serves as the Peace Education
Coordinator for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. December 10th,
Human Rights Day, serves as the platform to challenge the No Child
Left Behind Act. NAPF encourages students to get informed and
become active in asserting their right to privacy and to quality
education. For more information, visit http://www.wagingpeace.org/new/getinvolved/index.htm.
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