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Indiana Bill Would Allow Schools To Punish Students For Off-Campus Behavior, Online Speech

Student Free Speech

First Posted: 02/16/2012 2:59 pm Updated: 02/16/2012 2:59 pm

A bill that would allow schools to punish students for off-campus activities -- even while at the mall on weekends -- reached Indiana's state Senate Committee on Education and Career Development Wednesday. The bill passed the state House Jan. 30.

House Bill 1169, the Restoring School Discipline Act, would permit schools to suspend or expel students for engaging in activities away from school and after hours that "may reasonably be considered to be an interference with school purposes or an educational function."

Under existing state law, schools can seek punitive measures if students engage in "unlawful activity" that interferes with schools or education functions. But HB 1169, sponsored by Republican state Rep. Eric Koch, strikes the term "unlawful," allowing for punishment of any off-campus activity deemed to be an interference.

The bill reads:

A student may be suspended or expelled for engaging in activity on or off school grounds if:
  1. The activity may reasonably be considered to be an interference with school purposes or an educational function; or
  2. The student's removal is necessary to restore order or protect persons on school property; including an activity during weekends, holidays, other school breaks, and the summer period when a student may not be attending classes or other school functions.

"All students deserve a safe and conductive learning environment," Koch said in a statement last month, according to TheBanner.com. "In limiting grounds for suspension and expulsion to only 'unlawful' conduct, current law ties the hands of school officials to effectively deal with dangerous and disruptive behavior, including cyber bullying."

But the bill doesn't directly target bullying -- not once is the term used in the document -- and critics are concerned the legislation could challenge a student's First Amendment rights to free speech.

"If the bill becomes law, schools will be able to completely shut down the discussion of any topic they find disagreeable, since it is almost always possible to argue that stirring up public dissent 'interferes' with school purposes," Frank LoMonte, executive director of the Student Press Law Center, writes. "It will not be long before we see principals suspending the girl whose weekend wardrobe 'interferes' with the school's ability to promote a professional appearance or whose fondness for rap music 'interferes' with the teaching of proper grammar."

Koch tells the SPLC, however, that he "wouldn't knowingly promote anything that would infringe First Amendment rights."

Several states have already adopted or proposed policies that allow schools to punish students for disruptive behavior off campus and away from school. West Virginia recently adopted an anti-bullying policy that would punish students with detention or suspension for "vulgar or offensive speech" online if it disrupts school.

In a move that would counter Koch's Indiana bill, the U.S. Supreme Court last month let stand rulings that said schools could not discipline two Pennsylvania students for MySpace parodies of their principals that the students created at home.

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A bill that would allow schools to punish students for off-campus activities -- even while at the mall on weekends -- reached Indiana's state Senate Committee on Education and Career Development Wedne...
A bill that would allow schools to punish students for off-campus activities -- even while at the mall on weekends -- reached Indiana's state Senate Committee on Education and Career Development Wedne...
Filed by Emmeline Zhao  | 
 
 
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noahmarder
Exposing the regressive lies, one by one
10:52 PM on 02/20/2012
Our rights are being stripped away, bit by bit, and people sit around contently watching American Idol. I think our once great nation is beyond hope.
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HockeyMom
I was here before SP and will be long after her.
06:27 PM on 02/20/2012
They already do this in Michigan, law or no law.
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lcr999
scientist
05:10 PM on 02/20/2012
Schools should not be in the law enforcement business.

If they do a crime, call the police. If they commit tort, call a lawyer. Otherwise, stick to teaching.
01:20 PM on 02/20/2012
Bullying is just a liberal word for more government in our schools. School hazing is an important part of growing up. It helps prepare Patriotic American youth for management, military or industrial service channeling the strongest youth in those directions and the others, the meek liberal leaning, towards social work, teaching and lawyering. Also & too if a school administrator hears in September that any of their students engaged in sex during the summer break, they SHOULD be severely disciplined!
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TedEjr
How can they be Right when they are wrong so much
12:51 PM on 02/20/2012
WWII Germany came not through the barrel of a gun, but through legislation enacted by their legally elected Legislature.

Remember that.

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.---George Santayana.
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TedEjr
How can they be Right when they are wrong so much
12:44 PM on 02/20/2012
What is wrong with this country?

Why are we going through a period where we want to control every single aspect of a person's life?

And why is the crowd of smaller government wanting to reach further and further into our everyday lives?

This has become totally inane.
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AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
12:04 PM on 02/20/2012
This all powerful government is wrapping it's tentacles around your kids. Those in power need to infiltrate their free time and home life to keep them indoctrinated. It's not bad enough these kids are forced to be caged 30, 40 hours a week and saddled with hours of mind-numbing homework that takes more time away from their families.

Let's not forget the tens of thousands of dollars worth of debt the government has forced on them. And then there is the push for government kindergarten and even nursery school. The government needs as much of your child's life as they can get their corrupt hands on while you end up with very little. And people wonder why families keep falling apart. I could go on and on, and I will.

It is hard to keep a family together when the government takes half of their income, forcing both parents to work (more time away from their children while the state raises them and bills you for it). And if you homeschool and refuse to pay, the government will force you to pay with threats of violence against anyone if they refuse or can't afford it.

The entire system would be abolished if people knew how horrible it was.
rickcraft55
nobody is right if everybody is wrong
01:20 PM on 02/19/2012
strikes the term "unlawful," No let's not!

Instead let's deem that this politician no longer has the right to propose bill's that limit a person's legal right's. Your moral authority is more in question than a student with a dissenting voice.
Dragonlupin
Edit your micro-bio.
12:22 AM on 02/19/2012
So he is proposing a law that the Supreme court just a month ago shot down the whole idea of the law?
What a waste of space and time.
03:43 PM on 02/18/2012
The government doesn't know crap about students. Not all of them are disruptive, you know. Also, there is a huge population of students in the first place. How exactly are you going to keep track of them all? All this law is going to do is make students rebel and make this country become Orwellian or Huxleyian.
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YBLogical
Dreamer, thinker, creative genius.
02:43 PM on 02/18/2012
The GOP loves to say that with President Obama the US will become a prison nation as he erodes our constitutional freedoms but the funny thing is that a lot of these edicts are coming from Republican held states. Makes you go hmmmm?
02:00 PM on 02/18/2012
"When kids become teenagers, stick 'em in a barrel with a knot hole. When they turn 16,,,, plug up the knot hole." Dr Dobson....
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Hazelnut101
04:31 AM on 02/19/2012
How did you get out?
08:13 AM on 02/26/2012
LOL..... You need help figuring it out do you?
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09:02 AM on 02/18/2012
This is ridiculous. Rather than helping teachers and school administrators improve the quality of education being provided to the students, which is the job that we actually hire them to do, we are instead turning them into behavior enforcers that must not only attempt to manage student behavior in the classrooms and on campus during regular school hours, but that must somehow carry out surveillance on the students 24/7/365 or face legal action if a student violates some unspecified set of behavior code. Yet another example of government over reach...
01:14 PM on 02/18/2012
I absolutely agree.This is ludicrous.... The government is getting into things that it was never designed to interfere with.... Monitoring students' behavior outside of class and off campus? We're becoming a nazi state....
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gsmp
What the ????
10:08 PM on 02/18/2012
Just remember what part of 'government' is making this overreach.
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Hazelnut101
04:33 AM on 02/19/2012
The State government ran by gop's are creating nazi States one by one. If the people on the State level don't stop it.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
04:41 AM on 02/18/2012
The language is so arbitrary and educRAT$ are so power made and dysfunctional, what could be a good bill is more like another free reign invitation for fascists to impose their will on whoever they want. We see tardy students fined for truancy, teachers being fired for moral turpitude ( Your class reads Siddartha and suddenly you're the anti Christ) and students/teachers being stalked and punished for activity on octal networks nd blogs. If the bill addressed certain issues, attacks on other students via the internet, gang activity, drug distribution or a crime that demonstrated potential for serious violence, gun possession that sort of thing , it would be well intended. But this is a way to lash out and control the young rebels. It's unconstitutional. Veto .
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Thanks4Watching
Daily dose of cynicism
02:51 PM on 02/17/2012
This sets a very dangerous precedent. This same legislature is trying to legalize the teaching of creationism in public schools, and believe me, there's a lot more going on here than anti-bullying.

Read the wording of the bill. "Interference with school purposes." As someone who lives in Indiana and graduated from high school last year, many of my friends still in high school actually want that creationism bill to pass so they can sick the ACLU and Americans United on the school district just for fun (if you knew what our principal was like you'd understand). This bill can effectively be used to silence dissent from students.

The Texas-style culture regression has come to Indiana. And believe me, people like this are the reason why so many young people are disillusioned with religion.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
04:44 AM on 02/18/2012
Wow! Indiana is doing somethong right because you and your friends sound incredibly bright. Please visit us at www.perdaily.com
We'd like to publish your story. No worries, we can make it anonymous. Contact Lenny. Tell him Bonzai sent you. Keep up that rebel spirit, young friend.
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smallpawsdk
Hillary 2016
12:50 PM on 02/18/2012
Vote Democrats this year and tell those who turn 18 to do the same to save this country from the right nutjobs.