Rights In and Out of the Classroom
At the time of its school prayer decisions in the
early 1960s, the Supreme Court had never ruled
on whether students have the right of free speech
inside public schools. By the end of that decade,
however, the court began to consider the question. And the results have made the rules for religious
expression far more complex.
Rights of Students
The leading Supreme Court decision on freedom
of student speech is Tinker v. Des Moines School
District (1969), which upheld the right of students
to wear armbands protesting the Vietnam War.The
court ruled that school authorities may not supress
expression by students unless the expression significantly
disrupts school discipline or invades the
rights of others.
This endorsement of students’ freedom of speech
did not entirely clarify things for school officials
trying to determine students’ rights. Tinker supported
student expression, but it did not attempt to reconcile
that right of expression with the Supreme
Court’s earlier decisions forbidding student participation
in school-sponsored prayer and Bible reading.
Some school officials responded to the mix of
student liberties and restraints by forbidding certain
forms of student-initiated religious expression such
as the saying of grace before lunch in the school
cafeteria, student-sponsored gatherings for prayer at
designated spots on school property or student
proselytizing aimed at other students.
After years of uncertainty about these matters, several
interest groups devoted to religious freedom
and civil liberties drafted a set of guidelines,
“Religious Expression in Public Schools,” which
the U.S. Department of Education sent to every
public school superintendent in 1995.The department
revised the guidelines in 2003, placing somewhat
greater emphasis on the rights of students to
speak or associate for religious purposes.The
guidelines highlight these four general principles:
- Students, acting on their own, have the same right
to engage in religious activity and discussion as
they do to engage in comparable secular activities.
- Students may offer a prayer or blessing before
meals in school or assemble on school grounds
for religious purposes to the same extent as
other students who wish to express their personal
views or assemble with others.
- Students may not engage in religious harassment
of others or compel other students to participate
in religious expression, and schools may control
aggressive and unwanted proselytizing.
- Schools may neither favor nor disfavor students
or groups on the basis of their religious identities.
A case recently decided by the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals underscores the difficulties that
school officials still can face when students exercise
their right to religious expression on school
property. In this case, gay and lesbian students in a
California high school organized a Day of Silence,
in which students promoting tolerance of differences
in sexual orientation refrained from speaking
in school.The following day,Tyler Harper, a
student at the school, wore a T-shirt that on the
front read,“Be Ashamed, Our School Has
Embraced What God Has Condemned,” and on
the back,“Homosexuality Is Shameful, Romans 1:27.” School officials asked him to remove the
shirt and took him out of class while they
attempted to persuade him to do so.
The Court of Appeals, in Harper v. Poway Unified
School District (2006), rejected Harper’s claim that
the school officials violated his First Amendment
rights. Judge Stephen Reinhardt, writing for a 2-
1 majority and citing Tinker, argued that students’
constitutional rights may be limited to
prevent harming the rights of other students. He
concluded that the T-shirt could be seen as violating
school policies against harassment based on
sexual orientation.
Writing in dissent, Judge Alex Kozinski asserted
that the school’s sexual harassment policy was far
too vague and sweeping to support a restriction on
all anti-gay speech. He also argued that the school
district had unlawfully discriminated against
Harper’s freedom of speech. By permitting the Gay
and Lesbian Alliance to conduct the Day of
Silence, Kozinski said, the district was choosing
sides on a controversial social issue and stifling religiously
motivated speech on one side of the issue.
Harper petitioned the Supreme Court to review
the appeals court decision. But Harper graduated
from high school, and the case took a different
turn.The Supreme Court, in early 2007, ordered the lower court to vacate its ruling and dismiss the
case on the grounds that it had become moot.
Although the case appears to be over, it highlights
a conflict – one likely to recur – between the
rights of students to engage in religious expression
and the rights of other students to be educated
in a nonhostile environment. Indeed,Tyler
Harper’s sister, Kelsie Harper, filed suit in a federal
district court arguing that the school district’s
“anti-hate behavior” policies violate the First
Amendment as well as California law.The district
court rejected Kelsie Harper’s argument, and her
case is now being appealed to the U.S. 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals.The Supreme Court eventually
may clarify school officials’ power to suppress
speech as a means of protecting the rights of
other students. For now, cases like Harper illustrate
the difficulties for school officials in regulating
student expression.
Rights of Parents
Parents sometimes complain that secular practices
at school inhibit their right to direct the religious
upbringing of their children.These complaints
typically rest on both the Free Exercise Clause of
the First Amendment and the 14th Amendment’s
Due Process Clause, which forbids the state to
deprive any person of “life, liberty or property
without due process of law.”The Supreme Court
has interpreted them as protecting the right of
parents to shape and control the education of
their children.When they object to certain
school practices, the parents often seek permission
for their children to skip the offending lesson
or class – to opt out – rather than try to end
the practice schoolwide.
The first decision by the Supreme Court on parents’
rights to control their children’s education
came in Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925), which
guarantees to parents the right to enroll their children in private rather than public schools,
whether the private schools are religious or secular.
In West Virginia State Board of Education v.
Barnette (1943), the court upheld the right of
public school students who were Jehovah’s
Witnesses to refuse to salute the American flag.
The students said the flag represented a graven
image and that their religion forbade them from
recognizing it.The court’s decision rested on the
right of all students, not just those who are religiously
motivated, to resist compulsory recitation
of official orthodoxy, political or otherwise.
Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972)
| Majority: | Did Not Participate: |
| Burger | Powell |
| Douglas | Rehnquist |
| Brennan | |
| Stewart | |
| White | |
| Marshall | |
| Blackmun | |
Of all the Supreme Court rulings supporting religious
opt-outs, perhaps the most significant came
in Wisconsin v.Yoder (1972), which upheld the
right of members of the Old Order Amish to
withdraw their children from formal education at
the age of 14.The court determined that a state
law requiring children to attend school until the
age of 16 burdened the free exercise of their
families’ religion.The Amish community had a
well-established record as hardworking and law abiding,
the court noted, and Amish teens would
receive home-based training.The worldly influences
present in the school experience of
teenagers, the court said, would undercut the continuity
of agrarian life in the Amish community.
In later decisions, lower courts recognized religious
opt-outs in other relatively narrow circumstances.
Parents successfully cited religious grounds
to win the right to remove their children from
otherwise compulsory military training (Spence v.
Bailey, 1972) and from a coeducational physical
education class in which students had to dress in
“immodest apparel” (Moody v. Cronin, 1979). In
Menora v. Illinois High School Association (1982), the
7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the
Illinois High School Association was constitutionally
obliged to accommodate Orthodox Jewish
basketball players who wanted to wear a head covering,
despite an association rule forbidding headgear.
The Menora case involves a narrow exception
from the dress code, rather than a broader right to
opt-out of a curriculum requirement.
A great many school districts, meanwhile, have
recognized the force of parents’ religious or moral
concerns on issues of sexuality and reproduction
and have voluntarily provided opt-outs from classes
devoted to those topics. Under these opt-out
programs, parents do not have to explain their
objection, religious or otherwise, to participation
by their children. On other occasions, however,
parental claims that the Constitution entitles them
to remove their children from part or all of a public
school curriculum have fared rather poorly.
The issue of home schooling is a good example.
Before state legislatures passed laws allowing home
schooling, parents seeking to educate their children
at home were often unsuccessful in the
courts. Many judges distinguished these home
schooling cases from Yoder on the grounds that
Yoder involved teenagers rather than young children.
The judges also noted that Yoder was concerned
with the survival of an entire religious
community – the Old Order Amish – rather than
the impact of education on a single family. Indeed,
in virtually all of the cases decided over the past
25 years, courts have found that the challenged
curriculum requirement did not unconstitutionally
burden parents’ religious choices.
The most famous of the cases is Mozert v. Hawkins
County Board of Education (1987), in which a
group of Tennessee parents complained that references
to mental telepathy, evolution, secular
humanism, feminism, pacifism and magic in a
series of books in the reading curriculum offended
the families’ Christian beliefs.The school board
originally allowed children to choose alternative
reading materials but then eliminated that option.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in
the county’s favor on the grounds that students
were not being asked to do anything in conflict
with their religious obligations. Furthermore, the
court said, the school board had a strong interest
in exposing children to a variety of ideas and
images and in using a uniform series of books for
all children. Because the books did not explicitly
adopt or denigrate particular religious beliefs, the
court concluded, the parents could insist neither
on the removal of the books from the schools nor
on their children opting out.
The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reached a
similar conclusion in a case involving a public high
school in Massachusetts that held a mandatory
assembly devoted to AIDS and sex education. In
that case, Brown v. Hot, Sexy, and Safer Productions
(1995), the court rejected a complaint brought by
parents who alleged that exposure to sexually
explicit material infringed on their rights to religious
freedom and control of the upbringing of
their children.The court concluded that this onetime
exposure to the material would not substantially
burden the parents’ freedom to rear their children
and that the school authorities had strong reasons to
inform high school students about “safe sex.”
Rights of Teachers
and Administrators
Without question, public school employees
retain their rights of free exercise.When off
duty, school employees are free to engage in
worship, proselytizing or any other lawful faith-based
activity.When they are acting as representatives
of a public school system, however, courts
have said their rights are constrained by the
Establishment Clause.
This limitation on religious expression raises difficult
questions.The first is what limits school systems
may impose on the ordinary and incidental
expression of religious identity by teachers in the
classroom. Most school systems permit teachers to
wear religious clothing or jewelry. Similarly, teachers
may disclose their religious identity; for
instance, they need not refuse to answer when a
student asks,“Do you celebrate Christmas or
Hanukkah?” or “Did I see you at the Islamic
center yesterday morning?”
At times, however, teachers act in an uninvited
and overtly religious manner toward students and
are asked by school administrators to refrain.When
those requests have led to litigation, the administrators
invariably have prevailed, on the grounds
that they are obliged (for constitutional and pedagogical
reasons) to be sensitive to a teacher’s coercive
potential.
In Bishop v. Aronov (1991), for example, the 11th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a set of
restrictions imposed by the University of Alabama
on a professor of exercise physiology. Professor
Phillip Bishop had been speaking regularly to his
class about the role of his Christian beliefs in his
work and had scheduled an optional class in
which he offered a “Christian perspective” on
human physiology.The court recognized the university’s
general authority to control the way in
which instruction took place, noting that Bishop’s
academic freedom was not jeopardized since he
retained the right to express his religious views in
his published writing and elsewhere.
In Roberts v. Madigan (1990), a federal district
court similarly upheld the authority of a public
school principal in Colorado to order a fifth-grade
teacher to take down a religious poster from the
classroom wall and to remove books titled The
Bible in Pictures and The Life of Jesus from the
classroom library.The court also backed the principal’s
order that the teacher remove the Bible
from his desktop and refrain from silently reading
the Bible during instructional time.The court
emphasized that school principals need such
authority to prevent potential violations of the
Establishment Clause and to protect students
against a religiously coercive atmosphere.
That much is clear.What is less clear is how public
school systems should draw the line between
teachers’ official duties and their own time.That
was the key question in Wigg v. Sioux Falls School
District (8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, 2004),
in which a teacher sued the South Dakota school
district for refusing to allow her to serve as an
instructor in the Good News Club (an evangelical
Christian group) that met after school hours at
various public elementary schools in the district.
A federal district court ruled that the teacher,
Barbara Wigg, should be free to participate in the
club but said the school district could insist that
the teacher not participate at the school where she
was employed.The appellate court affirmed the
decision but went further in protecting the
teacher’s rights, concluding that the school district
could not exclude her from the program at her
own school.The court reasoned that once the
school day ended,Wigg became a private citizen,
leaving her free to be a Good News Club instructor
at any school, including the one where she
worked.The court ruled that no reasonable
observer would perceive Wigg’s after-school role as
being carried out on behalf of the school district,
even though the club met on school property.
In general, then, the courts have ruled that public
schools have substantial discretion to regulate the
religious expression of teachers during instructional
hours, especially when students are required to
be present.The courts have also ruled, however,
that attempts by schools to extend that control
into noninstructional hours constitute an overly
broad intrusion on the teachers’ religious freedom.
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