NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
Last May, the full 11th Circuit Court upheld a school board policy in Duval County, Fla., that permits graduating senior to select a student volunteer to deliver an uncensored "message" during graduation ceremonies. Argues the title, historical context, and content of the policy clearly suggest that school officials sought a way to…
Descriptors: Commencement Ceremonies, Federal Courts, High School Seniors, High Schools
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1999
Fragmented federal court decisions about graduation prayer and the strong public interest in this issue call for the Supreme Court to step in to clarify the law. Summarizes court decisions on this topic. (MLF)
Descriptors: Commencement Ceremonies, Court Litigation, Federal Courts, High School Seniors
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2003
Analyzes free-speech challenge to school district's guidelines for acceptable expressions on ceramic tiles painted by Columbine High School students to express their feelings about the massacre. Tenth Circuit found that tile painting constituted school-sponsored speech and thus district had the constitutional authority under "Hazelwood School…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Freedom of Speech, High Schools, Student Rights
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2000
In a 6-3 decision expanding on its 1992 graduation prayer ruling in "Lee v. Weisman," the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Santa Fe (Texas) Independent School District's pregame prayer policy. Justice Stevens pointed to significant school involvement in such student-led prayers and their coercive effects. (MLH)
Descriptors: Athletics, Court Litigation, Football, High Schools
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
In a case involving a knife in a car and a school's zero-tolerance policy, a circuit court decided it was unfair to expel a student for possessing a prohibited item if he did not know of its presence. Injury to another is impossible under those circumstances! (MLH)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Expulsion, High Schools, Prevention
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
In an Oklahoma case, absence of a documented drug problem among students in nonathletic extracurricular activities led the10th Circuit Court to strike down the district's policy as unreasonable and unconstitutional. Imposing random, suspicionless drug-testing policies for all students attending school might violate the Fourth Amendment. (MLH)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Documentation, Drug Use Testing, Extracurricular Activities
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1999
The Ninth Circuit Court's decision upholding the Madison School District's policy allowing students to speak (and pray) at graduation ceremonies is correct. So long as students are selected by religiously neutral criteria (class rank) and can speak on any topic, the Free Speech Clause should protect that student's expression. (MLH)
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Graduation, High Schools, School Prayer
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
In a case involving an injured football player, an 11th Circuit judge viewed a coach's refusal to stop a fight as corporal punishment. Federal courts in five circuits have ruled that excessive corporal punishment violates the Due Process Clause if it is so brutal and harmful that it shocks the court's conscience. (MLH)
Descriptors: Corporal Punishment, Court Litigation, Due Process, Federal Courts
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2003
Discusses the implications of "Niziol," a case in which a Florida high school student was killed in the school parking lot when his gun accidentally discharged. The parents sued the school board in federal district court. The magistrate dismissed all the federal law claims, though she postponed her decision on the state law claims. (MLF)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Federal Legislation, Guns, High Schools
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
In a Sixth Circuit Court decision, Judge Harry Welford concluded that the First Amendment did not prohibit an Ohio school district from banning Marilyn Manson T-shirts under the district's constitutional authority to regulate student speech (disruptive behavior) that conflicts with its basic educational mission. (MLH)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Dress Codes, Due Process, Freedom of Speech
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1998
In DesRoches v Caprio, federal district court ruled in favor of Jim DesRoches who had decided not to consent to a search of his backpack for a pair of allegedly stolen sneakers. Judge Robert G. Doumar decided the need to find the stolen sneakers did not outweigh the students' privacy interest and offered guidelines about school searches for stolen…
Descriptors: Discipline, Due Process, Federal Courts, High Schools
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2001
James LaVine, a high-school junior, wrote a first-person fantasy about killing 28 people in school and then committing suicide. The district suspended him for 17 days. James and his father filed suit against the school district alleging that the emergency expulsion violated James' First Amendment rights. The District Court ruled for the LaVines…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Expulsion, Federal Courts, Freedom of Speech
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2000
Pressured by religious conservatives, Congress passed the Equal Access Act (1984), allowing secondary school students the right to form on-campus extracurricular religious and other clubs. Recently, a Gay-Straight Alliance Club at a southern California high school was granted court protection under this statute, despite the community's objections.…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Clubs, Conservatism, Extracurricular Activities
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1998
Because some known gang members were wearing rosaries as gang symbols, a Texas school district told two students--who were not gang members--that they could not wear rosaries outside their shirts. A federal district court ruled (Chalifoux v. New Caney Independent School District) that the district's entire gang-apparel policy was void because of…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Dress Codes, Federal Courts, Freedom of Speech
Dowling-Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 2000
A federal district judge dismissed a suit brought by two students against a high-school principal who found marijuana in their hotel room on a senior class trip. Although the Fourth Amendment governs searches of students by school employees, employees need not have probable cause for a "reasonable" search. (MLH)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Discipline, Drug Use, Field Trips
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2