Just a few weeks ago, a 14 year-old girl in Georgia was expelled from high school after a teacher read from her journal, which included a short story about a dream in which she describes a student killing a teacher. It seems her first amendment rights ran head-on into the school’s need to keep kids safe.
If a child writes about killing a teacher, even in a dream, is that free speech or is that student a threat? That’s the question schools are being forced to answer.
Sixteen-year-old Ginny Coleman believes that fiction is just that – fiction.
“She certainly has a right to compose a story,” she says. “It’s her own creative work, freedom of speech, first amendment – that’s protected.”
Eighteen-year-old Andrew Tate agrees by saying, “Our country’s founded on these rights. And we rebelled against not having these rights. And what are we gonna do if we lose ’em ourselves? I mean, what’s gonna happen?”
But what happens if a school doesn’t take a mention of violence seriously? The first priority is to protect both staff and students.
“Clearly the right of the masses to be safe will always outweigh an individual’s right,” says education professor and former principal, Randy Dobbs. But, he says, not every situation rises to the same level of threat against that safety.
Weapons, for example, should not be tolerated at school. However, when the issue is a story, a dream or a piece of artwork, what a school ought to do becomes more difficult.
“On one side you have the clear need for everybody in the school to be safe; and then on the other side you have the need for a young lady not to be damaged in her own creative endeavors,” says Dobbs.
In the age of Columbine, of the perception of violence in American schools, experts say parents may wish to advise their kids not to give up their freedom of expression, but to be prudent about what they say or write in school.
Dobbs suggests, “I think we have got to help them thing that through and help them think about the time in which we live.”
“It’s a matter of watching out for our own well-being,” says Reid Stewart, 18.
Ginny Coleman agrees that although kids are free to express themselves, they may think twice about where they do it.
“Anything and everything really needs to be kept in mind in these times,” she says. “I know that I wouldn’t bring a story like that to school if I had written one. That would just not be a wise decision.”
The expulsion of the Georgia girl who brought her journal to school has since been reversed.
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