The school is taking care of two classes, one being a civilities class the other being a drug/alcohol class. The former being a class that is about how our actions as an individual affect others. The latter being a class that teaches the negative effects of drug and alcohol use, and how to avoid becoming attached or ever using in the first place. The Dean of Students referred me to the programs because this is the normal action that the school takes for such cases. When I went to the civilities class, there were two teachers and the dean overseeing it. One was had a masters in sociology, the other had a masters but I can't think of their field.
You're wrong on the correlation. If a student has money saved for college, but they have to pay an arm and a leg for something the court ordered them to do, the likeliness of them having to take loans for college increases as they have less money to spend on said enrollment in college.
I spoke with the Dean about my scholarships, she said that something "as insignificant as getting busted for smoking won't alter my scholarship status", so I'm all set in that manner.
Also, I would like to add that the topic title was changed. I never had the intention to "refuse to attend counseling", it's more of "I truly do not see the point, what should I discuss with my probation officer in regard to this counseling". Whoever changed the title should learn how to read through my first post correctly.

