tjTODAY
THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL FOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 6560 Braddock Rd., Alexandria, VA 22312
APRIL 12, 2013
Part of a bigger problem Feds recognize drinking while driving as issue Virginia needs to address right now
photo illustration by Tahmina Achekzai and Arya Dahal
The security office keeps a breathalyzer to ascertain blood alcohol levels, and Fatal Vision goggles are used as part of Driver’s Education unit on DWI.
Tennis undefeated P 7
VOLUME 28, ISSUE 7
FCPS asks counties to contribute
by Mallika Patkar Editor-in-Chief Senior Sajala Shukla, a student from Loudoun County, was accepted to both Jefferson and the Loudoun Academy of Science (AOS). Ultimately, the Jefferson student body was the deciding factor. “TJ had more of the community I was looking for,” she said. Whether surrounding jurisdictions will be able to continue sending students to Jefferson after Superintendent Jack Dale proposed they contribute to the renovation bill is moot. Dale’s proposal was approved as part of the FCPS School Board’s Capital Improvement Program for the Fiscal Year 2014. The renovation bill was originally calculated at $90 million before the bidding on the renovation was completed. The number has fallen to $67.44 million, but the estimations of per capita surcharges for each county are not finalized. Students from Loudoun, Arlington and Prince William counties as well as Falls Church City currently attend Jefferson. Out of 1844 students, 325 come from these jurisdictions. The counties will have the option to either pay in full in 2015, or to make annual payments over 30 years. Currently, contributing jurisdictions pay a fee that covers only operational costs. The renovation will roughly double the size of the school. The TJ Partnership Fund is covering costs of the updates to technology infrastructure and laboratory equipment. continued on p. 2
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by Tahmina Achekzai News Editor Officer Mark Harrington brought along several Fatal Vision goggles he’d borrowed from a driver’s education kit. TjTODAY editor Lindsay Williams attempted to walk a straight line in a simulation of a sobriety test. “Everything was distorted and sideways. The goggles gave me a headache,”she said. The other staple of every public high school’s sobriety kit is a breathalyzer. Although Harrington has no knowledge of a Jefferson student tested for drug or alcohol use while driving, there have been a number of cases of students coming to school under the influence or drinking on campus during his 10 years as the school resource officer. “TJ students are aware of what they have to lose,“ he said. “Their level of investment is different from other public high schools.” According to the most recently released Fairfax County Youth Survey, there was a 0.7 percent increase in alcohol-use and a 0.4 percent increase in binge drinking among students between the 2010-2011 and 20112012 school years. More underage drinking increases the risk of drinking and driving. In 2012, 205 teens were arrested for driving while intoxicated (DWI), as reported by the Fairfax County Police Department (FCPD). While the count of total arrests for DWI decreased from 2011 to 2012, the percentage of teenage arrests held steady at 8 percent. For the area immediately surrounding Jefferson, the FCPD recorded 14 DWI arrests
in 2012, one of which was a driver between 15 and 20 years of age. Teenage drinking while driving is a problem the U.S. Department of Transportation is trying to address across the country. Virginia is one of 33 states deemed ineffective in dealing with the problem. As a result, they have had to divert funds from road and bridge construction to highway safety and drinking and driving programs. Virginia ranks seventh highest in the amount of funds that needs to be diverted. North Carolina is number two. Harrington believes that students are putting themselves in significant danger by choosing to drink and drive. “We have high school students killed every couple of years.” When the suspicion of student alcohol-use emerges, the administration and the police can both investigate to make sure students were not driving at the same time. Under federal law, however, police and school officials are not allowed to investigate together. Principal Evan Glazer says when the administrators are presented with suspicion of student alcohol-use, they prefer to refer the situation immediately to Harrington. “If we don’t catch them in the act of drinking, it is nearly impossible to incriminate them,” Glazer said. “In the case of alcohol, I would prefer the police deal with it because they have access to Breathalyzers.” Coming to school under the influence can be especially dangerous for students due to the detrimental effects of alcohol on the brain.
One study published in the journal Psychology of Addicted Behaviors found that heavy drinking correlates with shorter attention spans among boys. In girls, the study found poor spatial functioning, a quality which can be especially imperative at Jefferson because of its association with mathematics. Because the teenage brain is not fully developed, teenagers are at a higher risk for fatal consequences. The under-development of the teenage brain is associated with higher risk of making harmful decisions. “The part of the teenage brain that is fully developed is the limbic system, which deals with emotions and impulses,” psychology teacher Jo-Ann Muir said. “Sometimes the emotional part overrides the part that thinks things out.” continued on p. 2
by Jenny Chen News Editor From cancer research to scrutinizing of Earth’s magnetic field to analysis of fencing moves, the Virginia State Science and Engineering Fair had it all. Out of the 285 projects showcased, however, only three stood alone as the Grand Prize winners and will advance to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), to be held in Phoenix from May 12 to 17. All three Virginia Grand Prize winners were Jefferson students. Junior Andrea Li earned the Governor’s Award and first Grand Prize, junior Manotri Chaubal took the second Grand Prize and the team of juniors Rohan Banerjee and Archis Bhandarkar won the third Grand Prize. “I think some of the things that made me stand out were the thorough background research that I did, my passion and energy for my project, and my presentation,” Li said. Li studied the role of interferon, a protein in the nonspecific immune system, in minimizing the growth of breast cancer and leukemia cells. She also won an award from the Virginia Biotechnology Association for the second year in a row. At the 2012 Virginia State Fair, she placed third in biochemistry. continued on p. 2
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DIVERTED FUNDS in millions
California North Carolina Indiana Louisiana Ohio Maryland Virginia Alaska
$70.5 $44.1 $40.4 $30.8 $27.6 $24.1
$21.4 $21.1
States are diverting funds to highway safety and anti-DWI programs.
source: Federal Highway Administration graphic by Tahmina Achekzai
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