Title: 1st Amendment Rights Freedom of Expression
11st Amendment RightsFreedom of Expression
- Presented by
- Elena Kirkendall and Lana Racine
- Legal/Ethical-2004
2Student Responsibilities
- To respect the rights of other individuals and to
express disagreement in a manner which does not
infringe upon the rights of others - To act in a manner which preserves the dignity of
patriotic observances - To respect the religious beliefs of others
- To plan for, seek approval of, and conduct
activities which are consistent with the
educational objectives of the school
3Privacy and Property Rights
- To maintain privacy of personal possessions,
unless appropriate school personnel have
reasonable cause to believe a student possesses
any object or material which is prohibited by law
or School Board policy - To attend school in an educational environment in
which personal property, including electronic
property, is respected.
4Privacy and Property Responsibilities
- To attend school and other School Board
activities without bringing materials or objects
prohibited by law or School Board policy, or
other items that will detract from the
educational process - To respect the property rights of the
public-at-large, as well as those of individuals,
and to refrain from destruction or modification
of, or damage to, such property
5Publications. Student Rights
- To participate in the development and
distribution of publications as part of the
educational process
6Student Responsibilities
- To refrain from publishing libelous and obscene
materials, or materials inconsistent with the
schools basic educational goals - To seek full information on the topics about
which they write - To observe normally accepted rules for
responsible journalism under guidance of the
family advisor
7Code of Appearance
- Shoes without closed heels or back straps shall
not be worn. - Halter-tops, tank tops, backless tops, top with
thin or no strap, or top that show midriff or
expose the body are prohibited. - See-through or mesh garments shall not be worn
without appropriate undergarments. - Form-fitting or overly tight clothing shall not
be worn without appropriate outer garments.
8 - Properly hemming outer garments such as shorts,
divided skirts, and dresses may be worn, provided
they are not disruptive or distractive. - Clothing and accessories shall not be worn if
they display profanity, violence, lewd, or
obscene messages, sexually suggestive phrases, or
advertisements, phrase or symbols of alcohol,
tobacco, drugs, or other symbols phrases or
advertisements that would be offensive to common
property or decency. - Head coverings, including, but not limited to,
caps, hats, bandannas, hair curlers, and/or
sunglasses, shall not be worn on school property,
unless required by a physician or authorized by
school personnel. - The waistband of shorts, slacks, skirts, and
similar garments shall not be worn below the
hips. Underwear, midriff and back may be exposed.
9Disciplinary Actions
- 1st Offense- Phone call to the parents and
parents will be sent a copy of the General Code
of Appearance along with a letter about the code.
- 2nd Offense- Principal/designee assigned
in-school suspension/detention and phone call to
parents - 3rd Offense- Parent/child dress code contract
will be written. - 4th Offense- Dress code contract violations may
be defined as a class 2.23 offense and may
warrant disciplinary action as outlined under
Class II offenses.
10Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier (1988)
After a school principal removed two pages
containing articles, among others, on teenage
pregnancy and the impact of divorce on students
from a newspaper produced as part of a high
school journalism class, the student staff filed
suit claiming violation of their First Amendment
rights. The principal defended his action on the
grounds that he was protecting the privacy of the
pregnant students described, protecting younger
students from inappropriate references to sexual
activity and birth control, and protecting the
school from a potential libel action. The Supreme
Court held that the principal acted reasonably
and did not violate the students' First Amendment
rights. A school need not tolerate student
speech, the Court declared, "that is inconsistent
with its 'basic educational mission,' even though
the government could not censor similar speech
outside the school." In addition, the Court found
the newspaper was part of the regular journalism
curriculum and subject to extensive control by a
faculty member.
11The Supreme Court held that the principal acted
reasonably and did not violate the students'
First Amendment rights. A school need not
tolerate student speech, the Court declared,
"that is inconsistent with its 'basic educational
mission,' even though the government could not
censor similar speech outside the school." In
addition, the Court found the newspaper was part
of the regular journalism curriculum and subject
to extensive control by a faculty member. The
school, thus, did not create a public forum for
the expression of ideas, but instead maintained
the newspaper "as supervised learning experience
for journalism students." The Court concluded
that "educators do not offend the First Amendment
by exercising editorial control over the style
and content of student speech in school-sponsored
expressive activities so long as their actions
are reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical
concerns." The Court strongly suggested that
supervised student activities that "may fairly be
characterized as part of the school curriculum,"
including school-sponsored publications and
theatrical productions, were subject to the
authority of educators. The Court cautioned,
however, that this authority does not justify an
educator's attempt "to silence a student's
personal expression that happens to occur on the
school premises.
12Can students wear swastikas or other inflammatory
signs on their clothing?
- Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School
District (1969) - Bivens v. Albuquerque Public Schools (1995)
- Castorina v. Madison County School Board( 2000)
- Boroff v. Van Wert City Board of Education (2000)
- Phillips v. Anderson County School District Five
(1997)
13Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School
District
- The strongest argument made during the trial, on
behalf of Tinker, was that the armbands caused no
(substantial disruption or material interference)
with the learning environment of others. (Fear)
or (Apprehension) are not sufficient reasons for
schools to be able to infringe on students
rights to free speech. In addition, another
important issue in the Tinker case was the
(inconsistency) in which restrictions were
applied to students. In other words, the black
armbands were (prohibited) while other symbols,
such as pins, were not.
14Bivens v. Albuquerque Public Schools
- The school in this case adopted their dress code
in response to (gang activity). One reason Bivens
gave for wearing the pants was (culture), but
since his fellow students did not understand his
message, the courts decided to (dismiss the
case). Therefore, not all conduct, including
ones style of clothing, can be labeled
(protected speech).
15Castorina v. Madison County School Board
- After the students were suspended for wearing
T-shirts with the confederate flag on them, they
argued in court that first, the school had
allowed other students to wear T-shirts with
(symbols). Second, they argued that they did not
cause a (disruption) in school and third, their
speech could in no way be considered
(school-sponsored). The court ordered the case be
heard because if the school is to put a ban on
racially divisive symbols, it has to apply the
ban consistently).
16Boroff v. Van Wert City Board of Education
- Boroff claimed that the school violated his
(First Amendment Rights) by not allowing him to
wear Marilyn Manson T-shirts. The shirt primarily
in question was said to go against the schools
educational mission in two ways 1) (mocked the
religious values of others) and 2) offended
others).
17Phillips v. Anderson County School District
- School officials should not read this decision as
a license to ban the wearing or display of
symbolic clothing or jewelry by students simply
because officials do not like the message
conveyed by the symbol or because the symbol is
controversial. The decision should be based on
(caused disruption). Also, beware of situations
where a symbol, even though it might cause
disruption, should not be banned. If students
harassed for wearing a symbol (such as the Star
of David), then proper response would be to
discipline the harassing students, not the
student who wears the pendant. Finally, as the
Supreme Court stressed in Tinker, school
officials can regulate or ban expressive conduct
by students only if their forecast of disruption
rests on (substantive facts), not on mere
speculative fear of disruption.
18Key Factors
- Substantial disruption or material interference
- Consistency
- Gang activity
- Protected speech
- Mocked the religious values of others
- Offended others
19- The First Amendment provides some, but not
complete, protection for students in a school
setting. The Supreme Court in Tinker stated that
students do not abandon their right to expression
at the schoolhouse gates, but that prohibition of
expressive conduct is justifiable if the conduct
would materially and substantially interfere with
the requirements of appropriate discipline in the
operation of the school.
20Suggestions for Dress Codes
- Consult your school districts dress code.
- Policy should focus child and school safety
concerns. - Consider including justifications in school dress
code policy, such as decreasing criminal activity
(gang wear), classroom discipline, peer pressure,
etc. - Allow some variety and flexibility in the dress
code policy. - Be able to justify the action by demonstrating
the link between certain kind of disruptive
behavior - Provide students with notice of the dress code
policy - Strive to maintain empirical evidence, such as
reduction in criminal activity and discipline
reports, in order to establish the effectiveness
of the dress code policy. - Update school dress code on a consistent basis.
21References
- Student Dress Codes Constitutional Requirements
and Policy Suggestions - www.modrall.com
- Freedom of expression in schools and minors 1st
Amendment Rights - www.aclj.org/issues/sturght.asp
- American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland
- www.aclu-md.org
- The American School Board Journal August 1998
School Law - www.asbj.com/199808/0898schoollaw.html
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