Regulating Off-Campus Speech: Guidance on the Way
April 01, 2021
Legal Brief
THE U.S. SUPREME COURT this spring will hear arguments in Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L., a Pennsylvania student鈥檚 challenge to her removal from the high school cheerleading team for posting a profanity-laced tirade on Snapchat after she failed to make the varsity squad. The court鈥檚 decision, expected by late June, should offer long-overdue clarity about regulation of students鈥 off-campus speech.
Here鈥檚 why the case is important to school administrators. In 1969, the Supreme Court decided Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, the landmark case addressing students鈥 free speech rights. The issue there was whether students could be suspended for wearing black arm bands to school to protest the Vietnam War. A sharply divided court ruled students enjoy a First Amendment right to express their views on controversial issues, even at school, as long as their behavior does not 鈥渕aterially and substantially disrupt the work and discipline of the school.鈥
With a few narrow exceptions carved out along the way, Tinker鈥檚 鈥渟ubstantial disruption鈥 test has remained the governing standard, at least for conduct occurring on school grounds or as part of school-sponsored functions, such as school newspapers and other student media. But how much disruption is required to cross the line? And how does the Tinker test apply to private, off-campus behavior that causes disruption at school?
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Author
David B. RubinAdvertisement
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