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Tinker V Des Moines Kuhlmieir V Hazelwood

Tinker V. Des Moines, Kuhlmieir V. Hazelwood Essay, Research Paper


Tinker v. Des Moines, Kuhlmieir v. Hazelwood


Scott Nagao 3/10/97 Period 7


About 32 years ago, in December of 1965, a group of adults and students


from Des Moines, Iowa gathered to show their dislike towards American


involvement in the Vietnam War. They decided to wear black armbands and fast on


December 16 and 31 to express there point. When the principals of the Des


Moines School System found out their plans, they decided to suspend anyone who


took part in this type of protest. On December 16 – 17 three Tinker siblings


and several of their friends were suspended for wearing the armbands. All of


them did not return to school until after New Years Day. Acting through their


parents, the Tinkers and some other students went to the Federal District Court,


asking for an injunction to be issued by Iowa. This court refused the idea,


forcing them to take the case to the Supreme Court. After hearing their case,


the Supreme Court agreed with the Tinkers. They said that wearing black


armbands was a silent form of expression and that students do not have to give


up their 1st Amendment rights at school. This landmark Supreme Court case was


known as Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District.


From the case of Tinker v. Des Moines Ind. School Board obviously came


some conflicting viewpoints about the armbands. The school board said that no


one has the absolute right to freedom of expression, where the Tinkers said that


only banning armbands and not other political symbols was unconstitutional. The


school board said that the armbands were disruptive to the learning environment,


where the Tinkers said they were not. Finally, the school board said that order


in the classroom, where political controversy should be discussed, is entitled


to constitutional protection. The Tinkers believed that the armbands were worn


as the students views, and therefore should be constitutionally protected and


respected by the school. These were all important arguments in the case.


Personally, I agree with the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the 1st


Amendment rights of the students in school. Why shouldn’t students have the


same rights as other people? If the students wore obscene clothing, ran out of


classrooms, or set the school on fire in protest of the war, then yes, I could


see disciplinary action being taken against them. However, the Tinkers simply


wore black armbands. Because this was not disruptive or obscene, I feel the


school should not have punished them.


Another landmark Supreme Court decision came in 1988 in the case of


Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier. In 1983 the principal of Hazelwood East


High School removed two articles from the school newspaper. He objected to


these articles because they described three students’ experiences with pregnancy


and divorce. He felt that topics such as these would be inappropriate for


student readers. The school board voted in favor of the principal’s action.


Cathy Kuhlmeier and several other students sued the school district in the U.S.


District Court of St. Louis. Despite claiming that their 1st and 14th Amendment


rights had been violated,

the Court found no violations. After taking the case


to the United States Court of Appeals, their case was taken to United States


Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, however, also upheld the principal’s actions


finding no violation of their rights. They said that because the newspaper was


run by school officials, that it could be controlled by them, “so long as their


actions?related to legitimate pedagogical concerns?”.


This case also had some arguments to consider. The school district said


that students’ rights are not violated when educators use editorial control for


educational reasons. Kuhlmeier believed that this was unconstitutional. The


school district said that because the paper was not a public forum that


censorship was appropriate. Kuhlmeier believed that the paper was a public


forum, therefore, she should be able to express her opinion to the community.


Finally Hazelwood School District believed that educators were responsible for


controlling school publications because they reflect on the school itself.


Kuhlmeier believed that controlling school publications stifled the students’


free thought and expressions; it limited them to only school-approved subjects


or opinions.


In this case, I agree with Cathy Kuhlmeier. I am not saying that


certain subjects such as obscene and non-school related topics shouldn’t be


censored, because they should. However, in Kuhlmeier’s case, I feel that


pregnancy and divorce are issues that face students at school. Because of this,


I believe that the principal’s actions were wrong, and that the articles should


have been published.


In comparison, both of these cases shared some very similar qualities.


Both cases were composed of a student versus a school district. Both cases


ended up in the Supreme Court. But the biggest similarity was that both cases


concerned students’ rights at school, mainly the 1st and 14th Amendment, the


freedom of expression. Both plaintiffs felt that their rights were being


violated by the decisions and actions made by the school districts.


In contrast, the time periods in which these cases took place were very


different. In the 1960’s, the war in Vietnam was going on, and there were a lot


of controversial issues and viewpoints facing students at schools. In the


1980’s, the war was over and there weren’t as many controversial issues


surrounding students’ rights. One case involved freedom of expression through a


school newspaper, the other through articles of clothing, but the major


difference between the two cases were the decisions made by the U.S. Supreme


Court. They agreed with the Tinkers in the belief that freedom of expression


through armbands was okay. However, they disagreed with Cathy Kuhlmeier’s


belief in freedom of expression through a so-called public forum.


As a student, I believe that freedom of expression is one of our most


important rights. Without this right people won’t know who we are; they won’t


understand our generation. Because of the many different definitions of freedom


of expression, people will always be in controversy over them. Let’s hope that


our school district never faces a problem as big as the ones presented in this


paper.

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