Fayetteville Independent School District

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    universities. Elementary and High-School teachers had far less protection from dismissal, faced more direct pressure from principals and parents to conform, and rarely asserted claims to academic freedom in class. Barbara Elfbrandt took the initiative on june 1, 1961. four weeks before the deadline for signing the form she had been given on may 1, she filed suit in Pima County Superior Court against Imogene Russell, who chaired the Amphitheater Elementary School District, and a host of local and…

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    For example, Tinker vs Des Moines symbolically struck the government with great voice. Under the assumption as civil disobedience, the students who wore black armbands at school to show their perspective of avoiding the Vietnam War were banned from school and later recognized as a damper on silent protests violates freedoms in school zones which evolved under the idea that this initial “civil disobedience” was actually now protected because of the first amendment. The first amendment grants the…

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    University of San Diego School of Law Journal of Contemporary Legal Issues and referred to as a “landmark case” by Thomas L. Tedford and Dale A. Herbeck. The case of Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District 393 U.S. 503 (1969) is a case in which Three public school students; John Tinker, Christopher Eckhardt and Mary Beth Tinker wore black armbands to school in protest of the Vietnam War. The school board…

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    Tinker v Des Moines and Hazelwood School District v Kuhlmeier. Tinker was America’s first Supreme Court case defining the extent of students’ speech. This case ruled in favor of students, when the court decided that students have their freedom of speech. This freedom could be limited, however, if a school could reasonably think that a student’s speech would interfere with the school’s…

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    use facts or even do something emotional, and they chose to use facts. By using facts, that just made what the author believes be even more real and true to the reader. One example of this is, “In the landmark 1969 case Tinker vs. Des Moines School District, the court upheld the right of students to attend classes wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War. But an Aug. 5 decision by the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia involved a less solemn form of expressive adornment:…

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    stop at the school front door. Students have a right to freedom of speech, covered by the first amendment. The First Amendment protects students’ freedom of speech, freedom of religion, the right to peaceable assemble, and right to file grievance against the Unite States (U.S. Constitution, 2010.) Students are able to incorporate religion into essays and works of art, as long as the standards of the project is met (Alliance Defending Freedom, 2014.) The limitation is when the school forces…

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    with a few students in high school and middle school expressing their 1st amendment rights. In December of 1965, a meeting at Christopher Eckhardt’s home was held in membrane to show their support for the truce of the Vietnam War. The meeting consisted of a group of friends agreeing to wear armbands to show their support for the truce. These children were wearing black armbands, and fasting to peacefully protest and show their support for the surrender. However, the school had caught onto this,…

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    or their opinions. Also how the teachers should have freedom of speech in school or out of school. The argument that is stronger for me is for the students and the teachers to be allowed to have freedom of speech and should always be protected. To begin with, at the public school in Tinker V. Des Moines, the students and the teachers organized a small protest against the Vietnam War. The students wore black armbands to school for the protest the fighting. But once the principle saw that the…

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    Tinker vs. Des Moines This court case took place in the December of 1965, in Des Moines, Iowa. A group of students at a local high school decided that to protest the Vietnam war, they would wear black armbands from December 16 until New Year’s at school. The principals at the high school learned of the protest, and established a new rule on December 14th. The rule stated that any student wearing a black armband would be asked to remove it, and anyone who failed to remove it would be suspended.…

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    in the home of 16-year-old Christopher Eckhardt to plan a peaceful, silent, protest on their support for a truce in the Vietnam war. They decided to wear black armbands and to fast on December 16 and New Year’s Eve. The principals of the Des Moines school learned of the plan and met on December 14 to create a policy that stated that any student wearing…

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