Community Corner
Study Drugs in Westchester, Putnam or Rockland Schools? [POLL]
A national story spotlights the illegal use of Adderall in high schools; have you encountered it locally?

A New York Times story with national scope took a local focus this week, unpacking the use and impacts of study drugs across the country and in Westchester.
Reporter Alan Schwarz speaks with parents, students and health professionals from coast-to-coast about teens' prevalent and illegal use of Adderall—a drug prescribed to battle A.D.H.D.—to study longer and perform better in competitive high school environments.
Schwarz sits down with the Sklars, a family nestled in Ardsley—a village housing a high school that graduates an impressive number of Ivy-bound seniors each year.
Find out what's happening in Nyack-Piermontfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Dodi Sklar, the mother of Ardsley High School ninth-grader Jonathan, sounded-off the the rise of yet another parental anxiety.
"As a parent you worry about driving, you worry about drinking, you worry about all kinds of health and mental issues, social issues. Now I have to worry about this, too? Really? This shouldn’t be what they need to do to get where they want to."
Find out what's happening in Nyack-Piermontfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Jonathan noted his mother's qualms aren't unfounded, either—several classmates, still years away from SAT and college-application stresses, abuse stimulants to stay on top of their workloads, he said.
The NYT story is sprawling and touches on everything from psychological affects to the trend's catalyst. And Patch wants to know if the culture outlined in the story something that's familiar to your community. Vote in the below poll, and sound-off in the comments.
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