The last resort -- As
desperate parents try boot camp, critics claim that alternative is
laced with problems
By Lorna Collier
Published May 27, 2001 (Chicago Tribune, Health & Family section)
Laura Martinez had tried everything from punishment to counseling in
an attempt to straighten out her misbehaving 14-year-old son, Ariel,
who was skipping school, disobeying and talking back to her. Nothing
worked.
Then Martinez saw a daytime TV talk show featuring a boot camp for
teens. On the show, rebellious teens were transformed, seemingly
overnight, by tough-talking, fatigue-clad drill instructors who
shouted in the kids' faces, made them march like soldiers and taught
them to respect their elders.
Last December, Martinez, a Chicago saleswoman and married mother of
three, sent Ariel to the About Face Boot Camp in rural North
Carolina, at a cost of about $1,000 for two weeks' care.
The camp, run by former Marine Raymond Moses, has been featured on
the Jenny Jones talk show.
"I was scared at first," said Ariel, who had to have his hair cut
and was made to clean bathrooms, sweep floors, jog and march in
military drills. "They would yell at you if you got them mad, if you
didn't do what you're supposed to do."
If you did what you were told, though, the instructors would be nice
and tell jokes, said Ariel, who learned "not to take things for
granted," especially TV, a luxury he especially missed while at the
rustic camp.
When Ariel came home, said Laura Martinez, "he was good for about
two weeks." Then his old behaviors came back, leaving Martinez
feeling that two weeks at boot camp was not enough time to change
her son's ways.
"It was a waste of money," she said, sighing, adding that she wishes
instead that there were a boot camp or similar program closer to
Chicago, where she could place Ariel for a longer period.
Demand by parents for private boot camps for teens has soared in
recent years, driven by daytime TV reality shows hosted by Maury
Povich, Jenny Jones and others. Frustrated parents are encouraged to
look upon such camps as a solution to problems with their
teens--despite the fact that research has shown boot camps to be
ineffective at best when it comes to changing teen behavior, critics
say.
"I disagree with the concept of boot camps," said Stacey Shapiro,
director of juvenile justice for the National Mental Health
Association in Virginia. "These `shock incarceration' programs have
failed in the past for the majority of youth placed in them. The
strict discipline and intense physical training, otherwise seen as
punishment by youth, is not an effective deterrent and does not
reduce recidivism."
In addition, Shapiro warned, state boot camps have had a disturbing
history of abuses, injuries and even deaths, causing many states to
phase out or restructure such programs.
Larry Brendtro, a professor emeritus of special education at
Augustana College in South Dakota, has written several books about
youth at risk and heads Reclaiming Youth, a training institute for
professionals who work with delinquent children. Brendtro said that
though some children "have received at least short-term benefits
from the discipline and high expectations of boot camp," many other
youths have had much less positive experiences.
"The public popularity of a drill instructor in a Smokey the Bear
hat compelling a smart-aleck teen to do push-ups obscures the system
by which these programs run," Brendtro said. "A boot camp only
functions as a bullying adult instills fear and then riles up the
cadets to harass resistant peers. If these behaviors were used in
any other normal community setting, they would be seen as assault
and abuse."
Brendtro, too, said that research has shown "no enduring
crime-prevention benefits of boot camps."
Yet parents continue to clamor for these programs.
No quick fix
"A majority of our families come in first and foremost requesting
information on boot camps," said Tessa Trass, who runs the
not-for-profit Troubled Children Inc., based in Redmond, Ore., a
service that helps parents find counseling or programs for their
children. Troubled Children serves about 500 families per week, said
Trass, and its Web site (www.troubledchildren.com) receives about
30,000 unique visitors each month.
Trass said many parents, enthralled by sensational boot camp "quick
fixes" on TV, think this is the only option for their child. Yet
Trass said boot camps are not always the best choice.
"A boot camp is just like basic training in the Army," Trass said.
"You tear the person down and rebuild them. For some children,
that's very successful--you need that discipline, that structure.
But with children with self-confidence issues, who are already
tearing themselves down internally, that's not going to be
successful.
"A lot of parents, because they are so frustrated, so angry and
hurt, say this will be the `reality check' a child needs, but that's
not necessarily true. It could be that's not going to be best for
your child. Maybe there are some family issues going on that need to
be looked at," Trass said.
A program evolves
Raymond Moses, 33, founded About Face Boot Camp three years ago,
after working in the corrections system, where he placed children in
state-run boot camps. After receiving many requests from parents for
a private camp they could place their children in, he started his
Christian-oriented program as a weekend camp for local children. It
quickly evolved and today the camp sees children from all across the
United States and countries such as Canada, England and Russia,
Moses said.
Boys and girls ages 10 through 16 come to About Face during the
summer months, for four-week sessions, as well as for shorter, one-
to two-week camps, offered during school breaks. The cost is $500
per week. Moses also provides "home boot camps," at a price of $300
per day, in which he will come into a child's home, take away perks
such as TV sets and video games, then make the child rise at the
crack of dawn to begin exercising and chores.
Last year About Face was shut down briefly by North Carolina
authorities when a camp resident complained of being handcuffed for
three days, charges Moses disputed. Today the camp is back in
business, and Moses is considering expanding it to include a school
program so it can become a year-round military academy.
Though Moses claims an 80 percent to 85 percent success rate with
children who have gone through his program, he agrees that boot
camps are not going to work for every child.
"We're a good tool to help motivate kids to make changes, but if the
kid doesn't want to change, the program can't help them," said
Moses, who also believes parents need to be willing to spend time
with their children and change their home environment in order for
permanent improvements to occur.
Kids have a say
Another voluntary boot camp, in which children can be placed without
the order of a judge, is the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office
Youth Eagle Academy in Belle Glade, Fla., which is limited to
residents of Palm Beach County. The camp is free; children, ages 13
to 16, must apply by writing an essay in their own handwriting, then
meet with camp staffers before being accepted.
"If they don't want to come, we don't take them," said Eagle Academy
administrative lieutenant Bill Swain.
The camp opened in 1997 and began accepting girls last fall. About
60 children (16 girls, 44 boys) attend each semester-long session,
which includes school for most of the day, then chores, exercises
and other activities. Parents are required to attend weekly meetings
to learn parenting skills.
Almost all other boot camps in the United States are state-run or
require a judge to commit a child to their care. However, there are
other teen programs that share many boot camp traits: physical
exercise, labor and Spartan living in remote locations, where
running away is difficult. Such programs are sometimes called
"therapeutic boarding schools" or "wilderness camps"; some are
marketed to U.S. parents but are in other countries, such as Jamaica
or Mexico.
An element of danger
Not all wilderness camps use the boot-camp model. Those that do,
however, tend to be quite militaristic, with "an in-your-face,
confrontational modality," said Mark Hobbins, senior vice president
of Aspen Youth Services in Cerritos, Calif., which operates several
youth outdoor programs that do not fall into the boot-camp category.
"Everybody can appreciate the value of living in a more primitive
environment where you hope your child will begin to appreciate all
that they have available to them," Hobbins said. "But we must be
very cautious. That appeal has to be done in a very therapeutic and
professional manner to produce proper results or you could end up
harming a child."
Unfortunately, some children have been injured or even died at
wilderness camps in recent years.
For example, Michelle Sutton died at age 15 in 1990 at Summit Quest,
a camp in Utah, when she collapsed due to dehydration during a
forced hike. Her mother, Cathy Sutton, has become an activist for
camp safety, calling for federal regulation to correct the mishmash
of state laws governing the industry.
Pat, a teacher in New Mexico who asked that her last name not be
used to protect her daughter's privacy, agreed to place her
misbehaving 16-year-old daughter in a program in Idaho last year, at
the urging of her ex-husband. Pat's daughter was taken from her high
school in handcuffs by a professional "escort," then driven an hour
away to the airport--still in handcuffs--where she was flown to
Idaho.
The program restricted contacts between Pat and her daughter,
allowing only four visits per year, with no visits on Christmas Eve
or Christmas Day, and only one phone call every two weeks. Phone
calls and letters were monitored; Pat's daughter was told if she
complained or asked to come home, she would lose mail or phone
privileges. Pat pulled her daughter from the camp after about four
months, over her ex-husband's objections. She said the program was
characterized by emotional abuse, including intimidation, threats
and sleep deprivation.
Though the program cost about $30,000 for four months, her daughter
received little in the way of education or individual therapy, said
Pat, adding that her daughter spent "most of her time chopping
firewood."
"It's a profit-oriented racket," she said. "I'd advise parents never
to resort to these facilities."
Yet other parents say that residential teen programs in remote areas
can work. John Freidheim, an Aurora minister, sent his daughter,
Cara, then 15, to a therapeutic boarding school called Carolina
Springs, in rural South Carolina, in mid-1999, after discovering she
had become involved with drugs.
Placing his daughter in the program "was the hardest thing I've ever
done," Freidheim said, yet he credits the program with turning his
daughter around. Cara stayed in the school for about 15 months,
returning in the summer of 2000. Since then, Cara said, she has
developed a closer relationship with her family, stayed away from
drugs and is doing well in school.
"It definitely was a life-changing experience," said Cara, now 17.
"I know I wouldn't be where I am now if it weren't for [Carolina
Springs], but it really is what you make of it." The program doesn't
work for everybody, Cara pointed out.
Looking for reform
Cathy Sutton, who lost her daughter at a wilderness program, doesn't
think all such teen programs should be banned.
"I believe in the concept," she said. What's needed, she added, is
reform, to make sure that the problems are corrected.
"The industry needs more regulation," Trass agreed. "Some states
have already adopted standards, but [without national standards]
you're going to have a lot of programs moving into states with
lesser standards."
Shapiro said that other types of programs can better serve children.
"Teenagers respond best to positive reinforcement and
encouragement," said Shapiro, who doesn't believe in taking a child
out of his "natural setting." She recommends family counseling,
in-home intervention, community activities and programs that
emphasis treatment instead of punishment.
But, Pat said, not all parents have access to counseling or local
programs and services.
"What's the alternative?" she said. "Where do frustrated parents go?
There aren't many options. That's why businesses have stepped in to
fill the void."
What to consider about boot camps
The following advice is geared toward parents who are considering a
boot camp or similar behavioral program for their teen. The advice
is offered by Larry Brendtro, president of Reclaiming Youth; Tessa
Trass, who runs Troubled Children Inc.; and Cathy Sutton, whose
daughter died at a wilderness camp in 1990.
* Call state officials in the state in which the facility is
located to find out if there have been previous complaints, if there
are pending complaints and if the facility is properly licensed.
Officials to contact include the state attorney general and social
services department.
* Beware of any program that puts limits on parent contact.
"Programs that try to insulate kids from parents are exceedingly
suspect," Brendtro said.
* Ask your contact person at the facility whether the staff has
been screened for drugs and what training they have, including CPR
and first aid as well as educational credentials; what the
facility's policy is concerning restraint methods; whether the
program pays referral fees to parents; whether there is a doctor
available or hospital nearby; what the student-to-staff ratio is.
* Visit the program or camp unannounced and ask to see every room
or area.
* Be wary of programs that encourage the use of "paid escorts" to
bring children to the facility.
Copyright © 2001, Lorna Collier
|