Friday, December 18, 2015

Friday, 18 December

PLEASE HAVE A HAPPY, SAFE AND HEALTHY BREAK!

Students turned in their 1st Amendment Guidebooks.

Students took a test on the 1st Amendment.

Students were given the final date of Tuesday, January 12th for any outstanding late work or work needing revision.


Thursday, December 17, 2015

Wednesday, 16 December

Besides reminding students of Friday's test and the Friday due date for the 1st Amendment Guidbooks, class was primarily focused on groups analyzing the following story for arguments in favor and against the ban based on the court cases we have studied around the First Amendment:

USA TODAY HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS:
School bans 'I Can't Breathe' shirts at hoops tournament
Teen basketball players face 'I can't breathe' ban
Lisa Leff, The Associated Press | Laura Mandaro, USA Today11:56 a.m. EST December 29, 2014
Description: endocinoIcantbreatheThe members of a California high school basketball team barred from participating in a tournament because they continued to wear "I can't breathe" T-shirts, plan a rally Monday, according to a local newspaper.
 Members of the Mendocino High School girls basketball team will meet outside the Fort Bragg High School for what a poster said would be a peaceful exercise of free speech rights and to raise awareness of racism and police brutality, said the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.
The coastal communities to the north of San Francisco were thrust into the national spotlight this weekend after the athletic director at Fort Bragg High School said that neither boys nor girls teams from Mendocino would be allowed to participate in the three-day tournament hosted by Fort Bragg out of concerns the players would wear T-shirts printed with the words "I can't breathe."
The phrase, uttered by Eric Garner as police wrestled the unarmed, black man to the ground in Staten Island, N.Y., leading to his death, has become one of the most prominent slogans among protesters who argue that Garner's death and others are caused by entrenched police racism.
The Mendocino High School boys team was reinstated after all but one player agreed not to wear the T-shirts, which the high-school athletes had worn during warm-ups. Too few girls agreed.
Brian Triplett, the athletic director at Fort Bragg High, did not return a call and e-mail to the Associated Press seeking comment. Fort Bragg High Principal Rebecca Walkerissued a written statement Friday saying school administrators respected the Mendocino teams "for paying attention to what is going on in the world around them" and that the T-shirts were being prohibited as a security precaution.
"To protect the safety and well-being of all tournament participants it is necessary to ensure that all political statements and or protests are kept away from this tournament," wrote Walker, who said she was speaking on behalf of the athletic director and the Fort Bragg school superintendent. "We are a small school district that simply does not have the resources to ensure the safety and well-being of our staff, students and guests at the tournament should someone get upset and choose to act out."
Professional basketball players such as LeBron James, Derrick Rose and Kyrie Irvingwore "I Can't Breathe" shirts during warm-ups this month without repercussions from the NBA. After Kobe Bryant and other Laker player wore them before a game and on the bench on Dec. 9, coach Byron Scott said he viewed it as a matter of "freedom of choice and freedom of speech."
That's how Marc Woods, whose 16-year-old son Connor plans to sit out the tournament, sees it. Connor wore the T-shirt at the Dec. 16 game in the name of team solidarity, but "now that's become a First Amendment violation, that's what he is fired up about," the father said.
Woods, whose father was a California Highway Patrol officer, said he is outraged by what he sees as using intimidation to silence players and fans. Fort Bragg administrators have warned spectators who plan to protest the T-shirt ban that they will be asked to leave, he said.
"It doesn't take a lot to suppress the exchange of ideas when you put fear into it," Woods said.

Both schools are located in Mendocino County, known for redwood forests, rugged coastline and marijuana-growing, located 120 miles north of San Francisco. The student bodies at the two schools are 1% black, 50% white and 41% Hispanic at Fort Bragg; 75% white and 9% Hispanic at Mendocino.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Monday, 14 December

1st Amendment Guidebooks are due at the end of the week!

Class began with a group jigsaw of the six supreme court cases listed below. These may be of great use to the 1st Amendment Guidebook project!

Next students watched and took (Cornell) notes on trials and juries. The guiding question for the note taking is:

1) Who is being protected from what by our justice system?
2) Does our justice system value individual liberty or community safety more?


Court Cases
10 Supreme Court Cases Every Teen Should Know by Tom Jacobs NYTimes


Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District (1969)

Issue: Freedom of Speech at School
Bottom Line: You Have the Right To Express Yourself—Up to a Point
Background
In December 1965, John and Mary Beth Tinker and their friend Chris Eckhardt wore black armbands to school in Des Moines, Iowa, to protest the war in Vietnam. School officials told them to remove the armbands, and when they refused, they were suspended (John, 15, from North High; Mary Beth, 13, from Warren Harding Junior High; and Chris, 16, from Roosevelt High). With their parents, they sued the school district, claiming a violation of their First Amendment right of freedom of speech.
Ruling
The Supreme Court sided with the students. Students and teachers don't "shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate," the Court said.
The Court did not, however, grant students an unlimited right to self-expression. It said First Amendment guarantees must be balanced against a school's need to keep order: As long as an act of expression doesn't disrupt classwork or school activities or invade the rights of others, it's acceptable. Regarding the students in this case, "their deviation consisted only in wearing on their sleeve a band of black cloth," the Court said. "They caused discussion outside of the classrooms, but no interference with work and no disorder."
Impact
In 1986, applying the "disruption test" from the Tinker case, the Supreme Court upheld the suspension of Matthew Fraser, a 17-year-old senior at Bethel High School in Tacoma, Washington, who gave a school speech containing sexual innuendos (Bethel School District v. Fraser). The Court said "it is a highly appropriate function of public school education to prohibit the use of vulgar and offensive terms in public discourse."
Lower courts have relied on Tinker in rulings on school attire, allowing nose rings and dyed hair, for example, but disallowing a T-shirt displaying a Confederate flag.
In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.




10 Supreme Court Cases Every Teen Should Know by Tom Jacobs NYTimes

Texas v. Johnson (1989)
Summary
This Landmark Supreme Court Cases focuses on a case involving expressive conduct, and what is for many a deeply cherished symbol of America—the U.S. flag. In a closely divided (5-4) ruling, the Supreme Court held that states could not forbid burning the U.S. flag in protest, because doing so would violate the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment.

In 1984, the Republican Party convened in Dallas, Texas for their national convention. President Ronald Regan, seeking a second term in office, was to be officially delegated as the GOP candidate for President. Scores of individuals organized a political protest in Dallas that voiced opposition to Reagan administration policies and those of some Dallas-based corporations—among the protesters was a man by the name of Gregory Lee Johnson. As the demonstrators marched through the streets, chanting their message, a fellow protestor handed Johnson an American flag that had been taken from a flag pole at one of their protest locations.
Upon reaching the Dallas City Hall, Johnson doused the flag with kerosene and set it ablaze. Johnson and his fellow demonstrators circled the burning flag and shouted “America, the red, white, and blue, we spit on you.” No one was hurt or threatened with injury by the act, but many who witnessed it were deeply offended. Johnson was arrested, charged, and convicted of violating a Texas law that made it a crime to desecrate a “venerable object.” Texas was not the only state to have anti-flag burning laws on the books, 47 other states also criminalized flag desecration. For his crime, Johnson received a sentence of one year in prison and was ordered to pay a $2,000 fine.
Johnson appealed his conviction and his case eventually went to the Supreme Court. Johnson argued that the Texas flag desecration statute violated the First Amendment, which says “Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech … or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.” The state of Texas argued that it had an interest in preserving the flag as a symbol of national unity. The Court had to consider: Are there certain symbols that are so widely cherished and understood to convey certain meanings that the government can regulate their use?
The Court agreed with Johnson (5-4) and struck down the Texas statute. Burning a U.S. flag in protest was expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment. “The First Amendment literally forbids the abridgment only of ‘speech,’ but we have long recognized that its protection does not end at the spoken or written word…. If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not
prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.…”
Though Texas v. Johnson has been upheld in subsequent Supreme Court cases, flag desecration itself remains unpopular in America. The House of Representatives has, on six different occasions, voted on a Constitutional Amendment known as the Flag Desecration Amendment, which states: “The Congress shall have power to prohibit the physical desecration of the flag of the United States.” Each time this Amendment has been introduced, it has passed the House by the required two-thirds majority. The Amendment never passed the Senate with the 67 votes needed, but it also has never received less than 63 votes in support.

1.     In his dissenting opinion, Chief Justice Rhenquist argued that Johnson’s right to express his views had not been abridged. “It was Johnson’s use of this particular symbol, and not the idea that he sought to convey by it or by his many other expressions, for which he was punished....Surely one of the high purposes of a democratic society is to legislate against conduct that is regarded as evil and profoundly offensive to the majority of people—whether it be murder, embezzlement, pollution, or flag burning.” How would you respond to this argument?
2.     Consider this: Before Johnson, 48 states had anti-flag desecration laws. Each time Congress has voted on the Flag Desecration Amendment, the proposal has passed by wide margins in the House and just short of the required two-thirds majority in the Senate. Do you think it is plausible that such an Amendment could become part of the Constitution? How would this impact the Supreme Court? Would such an Amendment alter the integrity of the First Amendment?

10 Supreme Court Cases Every Teen Should Know by Tom Jacobs NYTimes


Island Trees School District v. Pico (1982)
Summary
In the Supreme Court case Island Trees School District v. Pico (1982), the Court held that the First Amendment limits the power of junior high and high school officials to remove books from school libraries because of their content.

In the fall of 1975, a New York school board received a complaint from a community group, Parents of New York United. The complaint asserted that school policies on library books were too “permissive.” Specifically, the parent group complained about nine books, including Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five and Langston Hughes’s Best Short Stories of Negro Writers. The group said the books were “anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic and just plain filthy.” In response, the school district removed the books in February of 1976.
Senior Steven Pico joined with four other students to challenge the school board’s decision to remove the books. Pico claimed that the books were removed because “passages in the books offended [the group’s] social, political, and moral tastes and not because the books, taken as a whole, were lacking in educational value.” A dozen library and free speech organizations filed briefs on the students’ behalf. The case went to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court ruled in the students’ favor on First Amendment grounds, holding that the right to read is implied by the First Amendment. The government—in this case, a public school—cannot restrict speech because it does not agree with the content of that speech. The decisions called libraries places for “voluntary inquiry” and concluded that the school board’s “absolute discretion” over the classroom did not extend to the library for that reason.

In his dissenting opinion, Justice Burger said, “If the school can set curriculum, select teachers, and determine what books to purchase for the school library, it surely can decide which books to discontinue or remove from the school library.” Do you agree?


Tinker v. Des Moines (1969)
The Court ruled that black armbands worn in protest of the Vietnam War by public school students like Mary Beth Tinker were “pure speech,” or symbolic speech, and were protected by the First Amendment’s provisions for freedom of speech. The decision held: “First Amendment rights, applied in light of the special characteristics of the school environment, are available to teachers and students. It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate…”

10 Supreme Court Cases Every Teen Should Know by Tom Jacobs NYTimes


Bethel School District v. Fraser (1986)

A school could suspend a pupil for giving a student government nomination speech full of sexual innuendo and metaphor. “The First Amendment does not [require] school officials…to permit a vulgar and lewd speech [that] would undermine the school’s basic educational mission.”
The same reasoning was applied to a later case involving the free speech rights of public school students, Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier (1988). It clarified the meaning of Tinker v. Des Moines (1969) which addressed students’ rights to passive, individual expression. The decision quoted Hugo Black’s dissent in Tinker v. Des Moines (1969), which asserted that the Constitution does not require “school officials to surrender control of the American public school system to public school students.”
The case touched on constitutional principles including limits on rights, and civic values including moderation, respect, and responsibility.




Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier (1988)

In this case about public school students’ First Amendment rights to a free press, the Court ruled that public school officials can censor school-sponsored, student-produced newspapers, because the newspapers are part of the school curriculum rather than a forum for public expression. As stated in Bethel v. Fraser (1986), schools do not have to sponsor speech that is inconsistent with their educational mission.
The ruling clarified the meaning of Tinker v. Des Moines (1969), which addressed students’ rights to passive, individual expression.




How are these two cases similar and different?
What are the general conclusions you can draw?




10 Supreme Court Cases Every Teen Should Know by Tom Jacobs NYTimes

Morse v. Frederick (2007)
The decision in one of the most important student speech cases to reach the Court in decades came at the end of last term. The case, Morse v. Frederick, concerned the rights of a public school student to unfurl a banner reading “Bong hits 4 Jesus” at a school-sponsored event held off school grounds. We begin this school year with this landmark case on the rights of public school students.
Joseph Frederick knew the Olympic Torch relay runner was close and his anticipation grew stronger. Officials at his Juneau, Alaska school had decided that students should be able to see the Olympic relay pass on its way to the games in Salt Lake City, so a mini-field trip had been organized. Students were taken outside, across the street from the school. They were surrounded by television cameras and reporters, all hoping to the capture the exciting event on film. Few people even noticed Frederick was carrying a banner.
As the Olympic relay approached and cameras rolled, Frederick and some fellow students unfurled the 14-foot banner. It read, “Bong Hits 4 Jesus.” (This was a slang reference to smoking marijuana.) The banner did not create a disturbance, but Principal Deborah Morse told the students to take it down. When Frederick refused, Morse took the banner away and later suspended Frederick for ten days. She cited the school’s policy against materials promoting illegal drugs.
Frederick denied that the banner promoted drug use. He explained, “the words were just nonsense meant to attract television cameras.” He believed the First Amendment protected his right to display this banner at a public school event, and brought suit against Principal Morse. The Circuit Court agreed with Frederick and ruled that because he had been punished for the content of his speech (rather than any disturbance it caused), the school’s actions were unconstitutional. The case eventually went to the Supreme Court.
The Court decided against Frederick and ruled 5-4 that public school officials can censor student speech that could be reasonably understood to promote illegal drugs. “The concern here is not that Frederick’s speech was offensive, but that it was reasonably viewed as promoting illegal drug use.” The Court explained that the free speech rights of students had to be considered in light of the “special characteristics” of the school environment, and that it was an important responsibility of schools to deter drug use among young people.





Friday, December 11, 2015

Thursday, 10 December

Students were reminded of upcoming reading assignments and ....

Class completed the following activity and then discussed findings:

This article has language that you might find offensive; however it is an important issue related to the 1st Amendment. You may use the margin to take notes about this event and the 1st Amendment issues that seem related to it.

Quiz: Make a chart, list, or write a paragraph that describes as many 1st Amendment issues and rights as you can. Be sure to consider both sides of the issues involved and the role of the government (including police and schools) and the press. There will be a brief lecture to put the event in context, you may take notes on that as well. (Submit a separate paper.)
Church protests high school’s Gay-Straight Alliance
WRITTEN BY ADMIN | JUNE 4, 2010 Portland State Vanguard
On Thursday morning, members from the Westboro Baptist Church convened at Grant High School to protest its Gay-Straight Alliance. However, the protesters were overwhelmed by the response of an estimated 200 counter-protesters that carried completely unrelated signs designed to draw attention away from the subject.
In a letter addressed to Portland Police Chief Rozie Sizer and three commanders of the Portland Police Department, the Westboro Baptist Church’s attorneys advised that it would be in the WBC’s jurisdiction to stage “public demonstrations regarding the dangers of promoting homosexuality.”
In addition, the letter requested that law enforcement “place a reasonable ‘dead zone’ between the groups to deter attacks against [WBC] members.”
Attached to the letter was a press release, headlined, “WBC will picket these fag-infested, pervert-run, Oregon and Washington High Schools [sic].” Portland’s Grant High School, among other schools, was listed as the site for Thursday’s demonstration.
Kelly Welch, a 25-year-old Portland State graduate who is now a student of the PSU Graduate School of Education, felt that the most effective way to combat the protest was to not to give the WBC any attention.
“However, we’re Portlanders. We are not quiet people,” she said.
Welch therefore organized a counter-protest via Facebook.
According to Welch, the WBC’s goal is to destroy gay-straight alliances. In order to curb this, Welch and the other counter-protestors raised $144.19 during the protest.
Welch said she is in communication with Grant High School’s GSA adviser to figure out the logistics of how to donate the money to the GSA. She expects the money to be released to the GSA by next week.
Welch is also asking the GSA to help “kill the WBC with kindness” by sending the WBC a thank-you card for their help with fundraising.
She and PSU student Badger Vance, who also worked on the counter-protest, originally designed the card to give to Pastor Phelps of the WBC, who did not attend the protest, according to Welch.
Vance planned to respond to the protest with humorous slogans on signs, such as “I can’t find my keys” and “More hot pockets,” rather than add fuel to the WBC’s cause.
Other groups came to the counter-protest with signs that read, “Is this where the spaceship is landing?” and “This is boob.”
PCC student Josh Olsen, a counter-protester who held a Pacman game sign, brought it with the idea that a sign about something silly would satirize the WBC.
On Thursday morning, counter-protesters had already arrived at the scene when the WBC showed up 30 minutes before their announced arrival time, according to Welch.
After a few minutes, the protesters left and the crowd cheered, although counter-protesters stayed for an hour or more before dispersing, Welch said.
“It makes me really proud to live in Portland when I see the community rally like this with such love and understanding,” she said. ??
Metropolitan Learning Center student Aaron Schroeder, 16, saw about seven people protesting against the GSA at Grant High School at around 7 a.m. In the meantime, counter-protesters covered the sidewalks and street corners, he said.
Aaron’s 13-year-old brother Zachary was also present. The teenagers’ father called the MLC to let them know that the students would be protesting, Aaron said.
Dustin McSherry, 21, graduated from Grant High School in 2007 and was a member of its GSA. He said that the protest is personal to him because the Grant High School area is where he grew up.
According to McSherry, the GSA is a safe place for students of all sexualities to express their voices. After researching the WBC, he said he could not stay away from the protest.
McSherry thought the signs he and other counter-protesters carried were positive and drew attention away from the focus of the protesters.
 The spokesperson for the Portland Public School District, Matt Shelby, arrived at the school at 7:30 a.m. on the day of the protest to find the front lawn roped off as planned. In addition, the Grant High School Choir was singing on the steps of the school, he said. 
 “The WBC folks were already gone [by then],” Shelby said.
Though students were originally encouraged to come in through the school’s rear entrance, Grant High School’s administrators were allowing students to come in through the front entrance, according to Shelby.
A few of the school’s students snuck under the rope with signs, but were asked to demonstrate from the sidewalk, Shelby said.  Other curious high school students stood around watching.
Among the other counter-protesters, Shelby also said he saw clergy members from other churches and  a group of women in their late sixties.
 According to Shelby, everyone he saw was counter-protesting with signs and banners in a positive way, including students who respected the streets and gathered on the sidewalk.

Overall, Shelby believes the protest was a success, even though school started late. In addition, he said that students conducted themselves in a peaceful and productive manner.