Times Leader

Noah Feldman: Students can speak freely, thanks to cheerleader

In a landmark First Amendment opinion, the Supreme Court has limited schools’ ability to punish students for off-campus speech. In a case involving a cheerleader who was suspended from her team after criticizing her coaches and the cheer program in a profane Snapchat post, the court held that the school had gone too far.

While the court said that some off-campus speech — like bullying and harassment — could still be regulated by schools, it laid out general guidelines that were intended to protect students from having their online speech monitored and regulated 24-7 by the schools they attend.

Part of what makes the decision so important is that it reaffirmed the core holding of the famous 1969 case of Tinker v. Des Moines School District, where the justices for the first time recognized that students had free speech rights in school. That case said, essentially, that students were entitled to free speech in school provided they were not disrupting the school’s legitimate activities.

Since then, the court has gradually chipped away at the Tinker precedent, granting schools greater and greater latitude to regulate student speech. Wednesday’s decision, Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L., is the first major Supreme Court decision actively protecting student speech in half a century.

In the run-up to the decision of the cheerleader’s case, many anti-bullying advocates worried that if the court went too far in protecting off-campus speech, it would become difficult or impossible for schools to enforce anti-bullying and anti-harassment policies in the era of nonstop social media. The court’s opinion, written by Justice Stephen Breyer and joined by all the justices except for Justice Clarence Thomas, addressed this concern by saying that there may be circumstances that “call for” school regulation of off-campus speech.

The court listed “serious or severe bullying or harassment targeting particular individuals” as well as school-related activities like writing papers or using school computers that take place off campus.

The anti-bullying advocates may not be happy about this suggested list, but it is clearly better than nothing from their perspective. And they will be relieved that the justices did not adopt a bright line rule protecting all off-campus speech.

Breyer’s opinion went on to provide three general guidelines for why off-campus speech should receive fully robust constitutional protection, not the lower standard that applies in schools.

First, he observed that schools have special powers over students when they stand in loco parentis — law Latin for “in the place of the parent.” Off-campus, he said, “speech will normally fall within the zone of parental, rather than school-related, responsibility.” Advocates of parents’ rights as well as those who fear the extensive reach of government authority will find this observation highly congenial.

Second, Breyer noted that regulating student speech both on and off campus would place students under 24 hour-a-day surveillance. That would mean in turn that they might not have any contacts where they would be able to express certain ideas — particularly those involving politics or religion, which are especially protected by the First Amendment. Breyer’s correct observation does indeed give a strong reason to be concerned about extending schools’ authority over off-campus speech.

Third, and perhaps most remarkably, Breyer said that schools have a special interest in protecting young people’s right to say unpopular things. Schools, he said, also have an educational mission to teach the value of free expression, embodied in the adage “I disapprove of what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”

Breyer’s emphasis on the educational responsibility of schools to teach free-speech values hints that justices on both sides of the political spectrum are concerned about the possibility that traditional First Amendment values are eroding among younger Americans.

Applying these guidelines to the cheerleader’s speech, Breyer noted that while her speech was vulgar, it did constitute criticism of the school and its practices and policies — a subject entitled to First Amendment protection. He added that the cheerleader spoke outside of school and directed her message only at her Snapchat followers.

He went on to say that the vulgarity in the speech was a matter for parents, not the school, since it took place off campus; that there was no evidence that her comments were actively disruptive of school activities; and that there was no real indication that team morale was harmed by them.

It’s a bit strange that Justice Thomas was the lone dissenter, given that in recent years he has been the most absolutist member of the Supreme Court when it comes to free speech. He argued that historical evidence suggests that schools have long punished off-campus speech.

But his leading historical examples come from the 1880s, some 40 years before the Supreme Court invented modern free-speech jurisprudence. Thomas, in short, found himself trapped between his preference for originalism and his usually expansive First Amendment views.

For the other justices, however, the calculus was simpler. Free speech is a core constitutional value that is still, for the moment, shared among the court’s conservatives and liberals. Schoolchildren share that constitutional right. And making sure that they do should in turn keep the right to free speech alive for the next generation.