Chapter 3 Outline
Chapter 3 Outline
Any and all of these devices need to have guidelines and restrictions put on them at school. During
school hours they are not gaming devices but educational tools.
Due Process (pg. 80-82)
o Due Process prohibits the government of depriving a person of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law. Due process requires fundamental fairness, fair processes, and fair procedures.(80)
o Procedural Due Process is a set of steps taken before any legal action can be placed against an
individual. It is the right to know what you are being charged with. It also explains the seriousness of the
infraction held against an individual.
o Substantive Due Process in public school is to make sure students are not held out of health, safety and
welfare of faculty without a reason. Also so that students freedom or property cannot be taken without
appropriate justification.
Corporal Punishment (pg. 83-87)
o Courts still view corporal punishment as acceptable in schools. However with that being said schools
tend to shy away from use of corporal punishment. There is a fine line between punishment and
physical abuse that could result in assault and /or battery charges.
o Schools and states can make up their own rules when it comes to corporal punishment. How much to
be administered comes from many underlying factors.
o Schools that use corporal punishment need to have posted specific warnings of what behaviors will lead
to what punishments. There needs to be at least 2 administrators during the punishment. Parents need
to be notified if student received punishment.
School Suspension (pg. 88)
o In and out of school suspensions are legal forms of discipline that are growing in popularity. However,
school suspensions require that all provisions of due process be met for the charged student (88).
Expulsion (pg. 89)
o School officials may expel a student for a serious infraction that could potentially pose a threat to school
safety even when law enforcement officials find no basis to prosecute the student (89).
Student Discipline for Off-Campus Behavior (pg. 91)
o Courts have determined that because schools need to impose disciplinary sanctions for a wide range of
unanticipated conduct that disrupts the educational process, school disciplinary codes need not be as
detailed as criminal codes.
Classroom Harassment (pg. 93-94)
o Harassment is a form of sexual discrimination.
o Courts have ruled lawsuits are valid only when the harassing students behavior is so severe, pervasive,
and objectively offensive that it denies the victim equal access to an education guaranteed by federal
law.
Child Abuse (pg. 95)
o Virtually all states have laws requiring teachers to report suspected cases of child abuse and neglect.
49 states have mandatory reporter laws.
o Immunity granted in virtually every state when reports are made by teachers in good faith.
o Laws in most states penalize individuals who fail to report child abuse and neglect. Failure to do so may
prove costly.
Pregnant Students (pg. 96)
o Courts have held that pregnant students may not be denied the opportunity to attend school and must
be afforded equal protection under the law as well as due process of the law.
o Upon withdrawal from school (as prescribed by doctor, not the school), the pregnant student must be
provided with appropriate home based instruction.
Married Students (pg. 96)
o Any rules designed to exclude married students from attending school are invalid and in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
o Married students are considered to be emancipated, or free of parental authority. As such they are not
subject to compulsory attendance laws.
o
N. L. Essex (2012). School Law and the Public Schools: A Practical Guide for Educational Leaders, (6th Edition).
Pearson Education, Inc.