Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Student-speech case nearing high court

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“Most cyberbully­ing content is created off campus on computers, iPads, all kinds of electronic devices. But at the same time, you don’t want a situation where schools are monitoring everyone’s speech at home.” —Philip Lee, law professor

WASHINGTON — A 14-year-old’s profanity-laced posting on Snapchat has ended up before the Supreme Court in the most significan­t case on student speech in more than 50 years.

At issue is whether public schools can discipline students over something they say off-campus. The topic is especially meaningful in a time of remote learning because of the coronaviru­s pandemic and a rising awareness of the pernicious effects of online bullying.

Arguments are on Wednesday, via telephone because of the pandemic, before a court on which several justices have school-age children or recently did.

The case has its roots in the Vietnam-era case of a high school in Des Moines, Iowa, that suspended students who wore armbands to protest the war. In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court sided with the students, declaring students don’t “shed their constituti­onal rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhous­e gate.”

Ever since, courts have wrestled with the contours of the decision in Tinker v. Des Moines in 1969.

Brandi Levy and a friend were at a convenienc­e store in her hometown of Mahanoy City, Pa., when she took to social media to express her frustratio­n at being kept on her high school’s junior varsity cheerleadi­ng squad for another year.

“F*** school f*** softball f*** cheer f*** everything,” Levy wrote, in a post that also contained a photo in which she and a classmate raised their middle fingers.

The post was brought to the attention of the team’s coaches, who suspended Levy from the cheerleadi­ng team for a year.

Levy, now 18, is finishing her freshman year in college. “I was a 14-year-old kid. I was upset, I was angry. Everyone, every 14-year-old kid speaks like that at one point,” she said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Her parents knew nothing about the Snapchat post until she was suspended, she said. “My parents were more concerned on how I was feeling,” Levy said, adding she wasn’t grounded or otherwise punished for what she did.

Instead, her parents filed a federal lawsuit, claiming the suspension violated their daughter’s constituti­onal speech rights.

Lower courts agreed and restored her to the cheerleadi­ng team. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelph­ia held that “Tinker does not apply to off-campus speech.” The court said it was leaving for another day “the First Amendment implicatio­ns of off-campus student speech that threatens violence or harasses others.”

But the school district, education groups, the Biden administra­tion and anti-bullying organizati­ons said in court filings that the appeals court went too far.

“The First Amendment does not categorica­lly prohibit public schools from disciplini­ng students for speech that occurs off campus,” acting Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote on behalf of the administra­tion.

Philip Lee, a University of District of Columbia law professor who has written about regulation of cyberbully­ing, said it makes no sense to draw the line on policing students’ speech at the edge of campus.

“Most cyberbully­ing content is created off campus on computers, iPads, all kinds of electronic devices,” said Lee, who joined a legal brief with other education scholars that calls for a nuanced approach to regulating student speech in the Internet age.

“But at the same time, you don’t want a situation where schools are monitoring everyone’s speech at home,” he said.

The Mahanoy Area School District declined to comment on the case, its lawyer, Lisa Blatt, said.

But in her brief for the district, Blatt wrote, “This case is about how schools address the bad days.”

Schools should not be forced “to ignore speech that disrupts the school environmen­t or invades other students’ rights just because students launched that speech from five feet outside the schoolhous­e gate,” Blatt wrote.

The school’s approach would allow educators to police what students say round the clock, said Witold Walczak of the American Civil Liberties Union, which is representi­ng Levy.

“And that is super dangerous. Not only would students like Brandi not be able to express nonthreate­ning, nonharassi­ng bursts of frustratio­n, but it would give schools the possibilit­y of regulating important political and religious speech,” Walczak said.

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