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Chapter 16

Chapter 16. Student Speech. State Government, Schools, Speech. Private schools not affected by prohibition on restriction of free speech But public schools, being a state entity, are. How do you balance public school free speech with the need for discipline and control in education?

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Chapter 16

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  1. Chapter 16 Student Speech

  2. State Government, Schools, Speech • Private schools not affected by prohibition on restriction of free speech • But public schools, being a state entity, are. • How do you balance public school free speech with the need for discipline and control in education? • Supreme Court allows restrictions on free speech to prevent ‘substantial disruption’ in the classroom • More of an issue in K-12, universities not much affected PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  3. Forum Analysis • Open or Traditional-like a public square • Government can restrict time, place and manner but not content unless it shows a compelling government interest • Limited or Designated-like a school meeting room • Government can limit access to types of speakers and use of facilities to certain subjects, but may not restrict expression unless is shows a compelling interest • Closed or Nonpublic-like prison or military base • Government restrictions on access upheld if reasonable and not suppressing particular view PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  4. Spare the Rod • U.S. Supreme Court has not outlined school’s authority to regulate expression off campus. • But lower courts have applied on-campus standard of true threats or material and substantial disruption on-campus • How do schools teach about free speech while not inhibiting the same? PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  5. The Material and Substantial Disruption Standard • Tinker, anti-war protest, 1966, high school students had right to wear black arm bands, it was not deemed disruptive • Tinker test- [speech would] materially and substantially interfere with the requirements of appropriate discipline in the operation of the school PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  6. Summary • Public students have 1st Amendment Free Speech rights but • School officials may suppress speech that could lead to material disruption or the rights of others; • Or is lewd, vulgar or indecent; • Appears to represent the school; • Advocates illegal drug use PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  7. Tinkering with Student Speech Rights • Student speech from off-campus computers or phones presents a quandary for lower courts-result is confusion PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  8. A Bridge Too Far-admin overreach • Disciplining students for off-campus speech has been deemed overreach by some courts PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  9. Lobbing the Grenade • Disciplining students for off-campus speech has been deemed reasonable by some courts • Need a specific reasonable basis, a general feeling is not enough PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  10. A Tale of Two Cities • Students make vulgar comments, off-campus, on social network sites • Indiana finds speech protected • Doninger court denies injunction, preventing speech PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  11. Panel-demonium • PA cases disagree on whether a school can punish a student for off-campus, vulgar speech • Is there a parental duty to supervise children’s online activities? • Do parents incur liability by furnishing a computer to create an account? • Are statements about one’s sexuality libel per se? • Is a lawsuit seeking monetary damages a proper response by an educator? • Should schools focus on educating students regarding the proper use of digital social media, instead of ‘no’? PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  12. Tinker’s Overlooked Prong • Second part-invasion of the rights of others • May apply to cyberbullying PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  13. Student Hate Websites • Can a school prevent students for using its technology for the promotion of hate views? • Perhaps restrict technology to academic use (similar to banning P2P at WSU) PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  14. Cyberbullying • Court cannot uphold school discipline of student speech simply because…..teenagers are emotionally fragile? • But if it reveals a harmful intent? PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

  15. Analysis • There is a lack of U.S. Supreme Court opinions regarding the free speech rights of public school students • Focus should be on where the harm occurred PgP BUSA331 Chapter 16

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