Schools / Students
Student free speech, searches, discipline, and privacy rights in school.
- Can My School Punish Me for Off-Campus or Social Media Posts? Usually NOT. In Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L., the Supreme Court ruled that schools generally cannot punish students for off-campus speech, including social media. The main exception is speech that causes — or clearly threatens — substantial disruption at school.
- Can My School Search My Phone? Only on reasonable suspicion — and even then, only the parts related to the suspected violation. Under New Jersey v. T.L.O., school officials can search with reasonable suspicion, but confiscating your phone does not give them the right to go through everything on it.
- Can Police Question My Child at School Without a Parent? Sometimes — but a child's age matters. In J.D.B. v. North Carolina, the Supreme Court ruled that age must be considered in deciding whether Miranda warnings are required. Your child can say they want to remain silent and ask for a parent or a lawyer.
- Can School Officials Search My Locker or Backpack? Often YES — but only on 'reasonable suspicion.' Students keep Fourth Amendment rights at school, but the bar for a search is lower than the probable cause police usually need.
- Can Students Walk Out or Protest at School? Students keep their First Amendment rights at school (Tinker v. Des Moines) — a school cannot punish you for the viewpoint of a peaceful protest. But it can enforce neutral rules, like marking you absent for missing class, the same as any other absence.
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