This document discusses policy and legal considerations for social networking in schools. It provides an overview of emerging issues regarding social media policies for students and employees. Key points include that schools have more leeway to regulate speech that causes disruption or targets other students. Developing clear policies on acceptable use, cyberbullying, and employee social media use can help address legal issues that are still developing as social networking becomes more prevalent.
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Social Media for IASA Kishwaukee
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S T E V E N M . B A U L E , P H . D .
S U P E R I N T E N D E N T , N O R T H B O O N E C U S D
J U L I E E . L E W I S , E S Q .
S C A R I A N O , H I M E S & P E T R A R C A , C H T D .
Policy and Legal Considerations
for Social Networking in Schools
Scariano, Himes & Petrarca
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2. Schools & Social Networking
ï Emerging area in both
policy development and
the law = no clear answers
ïĄ Cases regarding social
networking are
confusing/contradictory
ïĄ Must analyze how court
decisions on other subjects will
apply to this new frontier
Social networking is an emerging frontier
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5. Acceptable Use Policy
ï Should include:
ïĄ Scope of use â educational purposes only
ïĄ Prohibited uses but also how to use technology
ïĄ Rules of use including full disciplinary options
ïĄ Liability - district is not liable for the accuracy of information on the web,
etc.
ïĄ Privacy statement â that the e-mail and other resources accessed on the
districtâs computers are district property and users should have no
expectation of privacy
ïĄ Password responsibility
ïĄ Cyberbullying and sexting should also be addressed specifically in your
bullying and harassment policies.
Schwartz, Janes &Reed, A Principalsâ Guide to Internet Policies & Electronic
Communication, IASB Education Law October 2008
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7. Basic Tenets of a Social Networking Policy
1.Purpose of social networking for the organization
2.Be responsible for what you write
3.Be authentic
4.Consider your audience
5.Exercise good judgment
6.Respect copyright laws
7.Protect confidential information
8.Bring value to the organization
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8. Types of Policies
ïŒEthics and new rules for educational ethics
ïŒAccess to Electronic Networks (Resources) - AUPs
ïŒHarassment of students
ïŒBullying and harassment
ïŒDiscipline code
ïŒBe specific about cyber bullying
ïŒElectronic devices
ïŒSexting
ïŒRestrictions on publications
ïŒSocial media contracts for staff
ïŒSocial media purpose or mission statement
ïŒSample Inclusive AUP http://www.nbcusd.org/board/policy/section6/6-
235AcceptableUseofElectronicResources.pdf
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9. Sample Policy Guidelines
âą Do not post any financial, confidential, sensitive or proprietary information about the
District or any of our clients and candidates.
âą Speak respectfully about our current, former and potential customers, partners, employees
and competitors. Do not engage in name-calling or behavior that will reflect negatively on
your or the Districtâs reputations. The same guidelines hold true for vendors and business
partners.
âą Beware of comments that could reflect poorly on you and the District. Social media sites
are not the forum for venting personal complaints about supervisors, co-workers, or the
District.
âą If you see unfavorable opinions, negative comments or criticism about yourself or the
District, do not try to have the post removed or send a written reply that will escalate the
situation.
âą If you are posting to personal networking sites and are speaking about job related content
or about the District, identify yourself as a District employee, use a disclaimer and make it
clear that these views are not reflective of the views of the District.
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10. Sample Policy Guidelines, cont.
âą Be respectful of others. Think of what you say online in the same way as statements you
might make to the media, or emails you might send to people you donât know. Stick to the
facts, try to give accurate information and correct mistakes right away.
âą Do not post obscenities, slurs, harass, or personal attacks that can damage both your
reputation as well as the Districtâs reputation.
âą Under no circumstances shall a staff member post any information about a specific student
without approval from the superintendent or designee.
âą When posting to social media sites; be knowledgeable, interesting, honest and add value.
The Districtâs reputation is a direct result of our employees, students and their commitment
to uphold our core values.
âą Do not infringe on copyrights or trademarks.
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12. First Amendment
Public Forum Analysis
ï Does the school allow the public to comment
on its Facebook page?
ïĄ If so, a court could find that the school intends
the page to be a designated public forum
ïĄ The school has effectively granted permission to
the public to engage in expressive activity on the
page as a matter of course
ïĄ Caveat: a court has not ruled on this issue
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13. First Amendment
Any prohibition of expression on a
designated public forum is subject to:
Strict Scrutiny
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14. First Amendment
ï Strict Scrutiny
ïĄ Any content-based prohibition must be:
ï·Narrowly drawn
ï·Effectuate a compelling state interest
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15. First Amendment
Social networking options for schools to
avoid infringing on First Amendment rights:
âą Do not engage in social networking.
âą Engage in social networking, but disable
âcomments,â âwall posts,â and âdiscussions.â
âą Engage in social networking and allow comments,
but do not remove comments on the basis of
content.
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16. Employee Social Networking
ïThe Supreme Courtâs holding:
ïĄThe Court assumed, but did not
decide, that Quon had a reasonable
expectation of privacy in his text messages
ï·The City had a no-privacy policy regarding
computers and emails, but it did not explicitly
include text messages
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17. ï The Supreme Courtâs holding:
ïĄThe employerâs search of the text messages
was reasonable
ï·Non-investigatory work-related purpose
ï·Justified at its inception
ï·Not excessive in scope
Employee Social Networking
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18. Employee Social Networking
ï Lessons for public employers from Quon:
ïĄ Have a clear policy that all employer-owned
communication facilities are subject to search at
any time and that no employee should have any
expectation of privacy
ïĄ Only conduct a search if it is based on a
legitimate, work-related purpose
ïĄ Make sure that the search is reasonable in scope
â donât be more intrusive than necessary
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19. ï Another reason to tread carefully when
conducting a search of employeesâ social
media use:
ïĄ The Stored Communications Act, 18
U.S.C.A. § 2701, et seq.
Employee Social Networking
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20. ï What if an employer searches an
employeeâs work computer, discovers
the employeeâs username and
password for electronic accounts
unrelated to the employerâs system
(For example, Facebook, Twitter,
Gmail, or Hotmail), and then
examines the employeeâs
communications in the private
account?
Employee Social Networking
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21. ï This could be a violation of the federal Stored
Communications Act.
ïĄ The Act prohibits unauthorized access to an electronic
âfacilityâ to examine stored communications.
ïĄ It is a criminal offense with civil fines of $1,000 per
violation in statutory damages, without need for proof of
actual damages.
ïĄ It is unclear whether the act of access is a single violation
or whether each communication retrieved and reviewed
is a separate violation.
ïĄ The financial implications of this question are enormous.
Employee Social Networking
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22. ï To avoid a violation of the Stored
Communications Act:
ïĄ An employer should not examine an employeeâs
private electronic account without permission.
ïĄ If the investigation is criminal in nature, the
access information should be given to police who
can then execute a warrant.
Employee Social Networking
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24. Employee Social Networking
ï What if an employee tweets a disparaging remark
about her supervisor, the school principal?
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26. ï Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563
(1968)
ïĄ Teacher dismissed after writing a letter to the local
newspaper, which criticized how the school board
and the superintendent handled funds.
ïĄ The Supreme Court held that this violated the
teacherâs First Amendment rights.
Employee Social Networking
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27. Employee Social Networking
ï Pickering v. Board of Education (1968)
ïĄ First Amendment rights violated when speaking :
ï· As a citizen (not as part of their
duties as an employee), and on
ï·Issues of public concern
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28. ï Balancing act:
ïĄ Even if an employee speaks as a private
citizen on a matter of public concern,
he or she may still be disciplined:
ï·Pursuant to an employerâs policy, and
ï·Where speech infringes on the
employerâs operations or on its ability
to provide effective and efficient
services.
Employee Social Networking
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29. ï Speech is not protected by the First
Amendment when statements are made
pursuant to public duties
ïĄ Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006)
ïĄ Schools should require that employees make
clear that they are not representing their
employer when engaging in personal social
networking
Employee Social Networking
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30. Employee Social Networking
ï What should a policy on employee social
networking include?
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32. ïĄAny social networking activities done
pursuant to the employeeâs job duties or
that occur during working time or while at
work are not private and are subject to
employer monitoring.
Employee Social Networking
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33. ïĄWhether and when employees may access
social media during working time?
Employee Social Networking
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34. ï Even when engaging in social networking on
your own time, make clear that your
opinions do not represent those of your
employer, and do not post anything that
undermines the ability of the employer to
operate effectively.
Employee Social Networking
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35. Students, Technology and Social Networking
ï How should schools regulate this behavior?
ïĄ Can schools search cell phones and other electronic
communication devices?
ïĄ When can schools regulate off-campus conduct?
ï The Standard:
ïĄ Tinker v. Des Moines, 393 U.S. 503 (1969)
ïĄ Material or substantial disruption rule: schools may limit
studentsâ First Amendment or other constitutional rights
only when the studentsâ conduct causes a material or
substantial disruption in the orderly operation of the
school.
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36. What conduct may schools regulate?
ï This standard is not always easy to apply, see:
ï Layshock v. Hermitage School Dist. 593 F.3d 249 (3rd Cir. Feb. 4,
2010)
ï J.S. ex rel. Snyder v. Blue Mountain School Dist. 593 F.3d 286 (3rd
Cir. Feb. 4, 2010).
ï Two cases:
ïĄ Same day
ïĄ Same circuit
ïĄ Opposite conclusions from panel of 3rd
Circuit
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37. Layshock Snyder
ï In Layshock, the panel found that
a ten-day, out-of-school
suspension violated the studentâs
free speech rights under the First
Amendment.
ï The student set up a fake MySpace
profile of his school principal. The
profile, which the student created
on his grandmotherâs computer at
his grandmotherâs house, referred
to the principal as a âbig steroid
freak,â a âbig hard ass,â and a âbig
whoreâ who smoked a âbig blunt.â
ï In Snyder, the panel upheld a
ten-day, out-of school
suspension of the student.
ï Using her parentâs computer, the
student created a fake MySpace
profile of the school principal
with a friend. The fake profile did
not state the principalâs name, but
included a picture of the principal
from the school districtâs web-
site. The profile included profane
statements suggesting that the
principal was a pedophile.
What conduct may schools regulate?
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38. What conduct may schools regulate?
ï The full Third Circuit, sitting en banc, heard arguments on
these two cases in June of 2010. On June 13, 2011, the
Court ruled that the students could not be suspended for
creating the parody profiles on MySpace of their principals
on home computers because there was not a sufficient
nexus between their behavior and school.
ï In Layshock, the Court ruled unanimously that the
studentâs First Amendment rights were violated when he
was suspended and stated, â[w]e do not think that the First
Amendment can tolerate the School District stretching its
authority into Justinâs grandmotherâs home and reaching
Justin while he is sitting at her computer after school.â
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39. What conduct may schools regulate?
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ï In the Blue Mountain case, in which the majority opinion
included 8 of the 14 justices, the Court also found that
the studentâs First Amendment free speech rights were
violated because âJ.S. was suspended from school for
speech that indisputably caused no substantial
disruption in school and that could not reasonably have
led school officials to forecast substantial disruption in
school.â
ï However, Judge D. Michael Fisher, who was joined by
five other justices, wrote the following about the majority
opinion in the dissent, âIt allows a student to target a
school official and his family with malicious and
unfounded accusations about their character in vulgar,
obscene, and personal language.â
40. What conduct may schools regulate?
ï The dissenting justices were of the opinion that the
school district had the right to discipline J.S. because
substantial disruption was reasonably foreseeable.
ï The School District has decided to file a writ of
certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court to ask it to
review the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals.
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41. The Good News âŠ
ï Courts are less inclined to uphold studentsâ First
Amendment rights in cases where students are disciplined
for ridiculing/bullying other students
ï Kara Kowalski suspended for creating and posting to
MySpace a discussion group web page that ridiculed a
fellow student and included pictures of her. After creating
the group, Kara invited 100 people on her friends list to
join. The next day, targetâs parents, along w/ target, went to
high school to file harassment complaint with vice
principal. Kowalski v. Berkeley County Schools, 652 F.3d
565 (4th Cir. 2011), cert. denied.
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42. Kowalski v. Berkeley County Schools continued:
ï School administrators determined that Kara had created a âhate
websiteâ in violation of school policy against âharassment, bullying and
intimidationâ; suspended her from school for 10 days, issued a 90-day
social suspension and precluded her from participating on cheerleading
squad for remainder of year.
ï Kara sued alleging that suspension violated her free speech rights
under the First Amendment and due process rights under Fourteenth
Amendment, but 4th Circuit held in favor of school and school officials
noting that âthere is surely a limit to the scope of a high schoolâs
interest in the order, safety, and well-being of its students when the
speech originates outside the schoolhouse gate,â but determined they
were âsatisfied that the nexus of Kowalskiâs speech to Musselman High
Schoolâs pedagogical interests was sufficiently strong to justify the
action taken by school officials in carrying out their role as the trustees
of the student bodyâs well-being.â
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43. Avery Doninger v. Superintendent over âJamfestâ
ï In Doninger v. Niehoff, 642 F.3d 334 (2nd Cir. 2011), cert.
denied, Avery was punished for sending an e-mail to
students and parents affiliated with the school and for
posting a message on her personal blog criticizing the
school for cancelling a school event â âJamfestâ â an
annual battle-of-the-bands concert that Avery and other
Student Council members helped to plan.
ï Avery called school officials âdouchebagsâ on her blog and
her e-mail encouraged people to contact the
superintendent to âpiss her off even more.â
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44. Doninger v. Niehoff continued:
ï Avery had accessed an e-mail account of the father of one of
the students from the schoolâs computer lab to send a mass
e-mail in spite of a school policy that specifically restricted
âaccess of the internet or e-mail using accounts other than
those provided by the district for school purposes.â The
next day, the students gathered outside the administration
office to protest the cancellation.
ï The Court concluded that the substantial disruption test
established by Tinker was met and that school officials
could prohibit Avery from running for class secretary.
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46. Questions or Comments?
Steve Baule
baules@nbcusd.org
815-765-3322
Julie E. Lewis
Two Prudential Plaza, Suite 3100
180 N. Stetson
Chicago, IL 60601
jlewis@edlawyer.com
312.565.3100 x254
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Hinweis der Redaktion
Background: Deputy district attorney filed § 1983 complaint against county and supervisors at districtattorneys' office, alleging that he was subject to adverse employment actions in retaliation for engagingin protected speech, that is, for writing a disposition memorandum in which he recommendeddismissal of a case on the basis of purported governmental misconduct. The United States DistrictCourt for the Central District of California, A. Howard Matz, J., granted defendants' motion forsummary judgment, and district attorney appealed. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Reinhardt,Circuit Judge, 361 F.3d 1168, reversed and remanded. Certiorari was granted.Holdings: The United States Supreme Court, Justice Kennedy, held that:(1) when public employees make statements pursuant to their official duties, they are not speaking ascitizens for First Amendment purposes, and the Constitution does not insulate their communicationsfrom employer discipline, and (2) here, district attorney did not speak as a citizen when he wrote his memo and, thus, his speech was not protected by the First Amendment.
Part of social suspension- Kara was prevented from crowning the next âQueen of Charmâ in that yearâs Charm Review, having been elected âQueenâ herself the previous year.
The school district had a policy in place regarding eligibility to represent its schools in elected offices that read as follows:All students elected to student offices, or who represent their schools in extracurricular activities, shall have and maintain good citizenship records. Any student who does not maintain a good citizenship record shall not be allowed to represent fellow students nor the schools for a period of time recommended by the studentâs principal, but in no case, except when approved by the board of education, shall the time exceed twelve calendar months.Avery had signed the policy, attesting that she had reviewed it with her family.