It's been some 30 years or more since the U.S. Supreme Court established some of the most significant precedents for students in schools, including one that the First Amendment does indeed apply to students in schools.
But still sometimes educators don't understand, as happened with a recent case in Illinois where officials confiscated a Bible from a second-grader simply because she was reading it during recess, and would talk about it with friends.
They objected, and the school changed its course slightly, determining she "could read it during outside recess but not during inside recess," the report said.
That was after the school confirmed there were no complaints about the bible reading.
Her parents then called the ACLJ, and its lawyers sent a letter with an explanation of what the law allows.
"We let them know about the now half-century-old Supreme Court case of Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District, 393 U.S. 503 (1969). In Tinker, students wore black armbands on their sleeves to exhibit their disapproval of the Vietnam War and were sent home and suspended from school. Ruling in the students’ favor, the Supreme Court in Tinker held that students do not 'shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.'"
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