Democracy is disruptive
I am no legal eagle, so my analysis of the first day of testimony at the Avery Doninger trial may be a little off base. As I understand things, a key defense that a student’s freedom of speech has not been violated is if the student’s speech was ‘disruptive’.
The defense lawyer grilled the students testifying about whether or not the students knew if the administration had been disrupted by receiving all the phone calls that they had been receiving. He seemed to be suggesting that it is a disruption for school administrators to receive phone calls from concerned parents and taxpayers.
The defense repeatedly asked students if they thought it was appropriate to for the students to send an email encouraging taxpayers to contact the school. The implication was that he believed it was not. I suspect this gets to a crucial point in the case. The view of the school administration seems to be that they can’t be bothered with what parents and taxpayers think. The implicit message is that the school administration knows best and the parents, students and taxpayers be damned.
The same issue came up with campaigning leading up to the vote. Avery and her supporters had T-shirts saying Team Avery, and something like “Support Freedom of Speech”. The school seems to suggest that this was disruptive as the reason it wasn’t allowed into the room where people were campaigning.
A key argument of the administration is that student leaders serve at the whim of the administration, and they need to act like adults to earn that privilege. Well, excuse me, but I believe that the folks who are acting like adults are the students. When you want to get a policy changed, you get people involved and urge them to contact the policy makers. That is what we adults do. We encourage friends to write to our elected officials. When we run for office, we wear T-shirts and buttons.
At the end of the day, Judge Kravitz addressed both sides talking about how cases like these are the ones that lawyers and judges love as they wind their long way to the Supreme Court. Yet he went on to talk about this from a perspective that is extremely important to me, that of the teaching opportunity. I believe that today was a valuable day for Avery and the students that got a chance to testify today. If this drags on, it can be a wonderful opportunity for students to learn more about the legal process. Yet Judge Kravitz had another suggestion. This could also be an opportunity for students to learn about finding meaningful resolutions other ways than litigation.
I hope that people listen to his remarks. Yet that may require relearning other more important and difficult lessons about humility, being able to admit one’s mistakes. Right now, it appears as if the school administration is more interested in vindictiveness and their lawyers on nitpicking than they are in serving the public interest or helping students learn.
Judge Kravitz's remarks
Submitted by js on Wed, 08/22/2007 - 20:22. span>What this twisted brain heard the Judge say today was in effect "Paula Schwartz: grow up, suck it up, admit that you were wrong, and teach the kids the mature way to settle disagreements." And having seen Paula in action for many years I knew that there was no chance in hell that she would. Leona Helmsley held nothing on her. She brags (at least she did to me) about how many students she expels in a year. Students are guilty until proven guilty (yes, I meant to say that) and their parents are no better. There was no happier day in the last 10 years of my life than the day that both of my kids had graduated from Mills and were no longer within Paula's reach.
There did seem to be a sort
Submitted by am on Wed, 08/22/2007 - 22:44. span>There did seem to be a sort of perverse pleasure taken by the administration when it came to the expulsion of students; one of my good friends and I found ourselves in handcuffs in school because of this. If it was completely up to PS I'm sure we would have found ourselves out of school for far longer than we were, but in the end, the two of us are graduated with bright futures and everything to look forward to; the administration is in a court battle defining 'douche bag', and the Superintendent is 'retiring' at the end of December.
Today in court, the defendants lawyer sank to the level of berating students about anything and everything, including harassing one girl about how she described a teachers name, simply because the scribe couldn't understand the word 'Wing'. They have even gone so far as to subpoena a student who was asleep in class to try to make a fool of him, when all he wants to do is go to his college orientation on Thursday. Who really wins here?