What are we going to do about parents who continue to let their children ignore the rules? This girl was called into the office on 2 previous occassions, I don't believe that her parents didn't know this was happening. Schools are critized for not protecting the kids when a shooting happens, but when they do punish a child we call them out on that. The fact is that we do not have the whole story here. MOO
The school should only be involved in things that:
1. Evidence that there is a threat to the child's welfare, such as signs of abuse, neglect, or suicidal ideation
2. Relate directly to the health, safety and welfare of all students and staff.
This child was on FB but that is a parenting issue, not a school issue. Her comment that a staff member was mean to her doesn't sound like much, unless there was more to the story or something we are not hearing. If not, it has nothing to do with the health, safety and welfare of the staff or other students. A call to the parents and a conference with them, the child and possibly the hall monitor would have been in order if the school felt they needed to explore the issue.
That's right she has to have what the legal world calls clean hands and by being under age and lying about her age could cause the lawsuit to be thrown out of court.
What I remember from law school is that the doctrine of unclean hands applies if the plaintiff did not act in good faith.
The fact that this kid went against FB's policy by having a page while underage, would have nothing to do with her complaint against the school, that they humiliated her and breached her 1st amendment rights, rights to privacy, etc.
It would be different, IMO, if she was suing FB for some act.
Bottom line, I think the tactics used against this child, if there is no more to the story of what she posted, were punitive and out of line. There are much bigger things to worry about than a kid posting innocuous comments outside class.
I agree with those who state that if the school came across posts that caused them concern, such as an indication the child was being sexually abused or making threats against another, they should have reported that to the police and left it to the police to investigate. Otherwise, anything less than potentially criminal conduct should have resulted in a call to the parents.
What they did was wrong, IMO. And if they have so much time on their hands to worry about such postings, I believe they are missing much more important things occurring under their noses. Such as real abuse or perhaps failing students, crummy teachers, etc.
This, to me, (with the assumption that there isn't more to the story) is just another example of mediocre bureaucrats who are keeping busy with nonsense because they lack the intelligence to do their actual jobs. :moo: