Pubdate: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.dailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Amy Bounds STUDENT PRIVACY MURKY IN TECH WORLD Rules Unclear On Whether Monarch Had Right To Search Phones Public-school students can have their lockers searched, be sent home for wearing a shirt that promotes drugs and have an article in a school-sponsored newspaper or yearbook censored, but constitutional limits when it comes to the privacy of technology -- such as cell phones -- are murkier. STORY TOOLS E-mail story Comments iPod friendly Printer friendly More Schools Learning Lessons: Science -- it really is for everyone Teaching an art for Williams School Briefs - Oct. 14 Share and Enjoy [?] Share your video, photos and news tips. All that's required for a school administrator to search a car or backpack is "reasonable suspicion" that the student is breaking the law or even a school rule. "It's false to say you have zero privacy in school, but it's accurate to say you have very little privacy," said Paul Ohm, a University of Colorado law professor. "Courts are really willing to be very forgiving of the steps school administrators take to maintain school safety and school security." But while the courts typically have sided with schools, students don't give up all their rights when they walk through the school doors. A school can't force students to stand and recite the Pledge of Allegiance or search every student's backpack just in case one might contain drugs or a weapon. Students also are allowed to wear clothing that makes a political statement -- as long as it doesn't cause a disruption -- and enjoy more freedom of speech with "underground" publications. However, there are fewer court decisions on privacy rights involving electronic or Web-based technology to provide direction to schools. A complaint against Louisville's Monarch High School is raising the issue of the privacy of student cell-phone text messages. "Until we have a court case that says a school has crossed the line, it's hard to say where the line is," Ohm said. The American Civil Liberties Union last week accused administrators at Monarch High of violating state law and the Fourth Amendment by seizing students' cell phones, reading their text messages and making transcripts. Boulder Valley technology policies The Boulder Valley School District doesn't have a policy prohibiting cell-phone use in class, instead leaving that decision up to individual schools. Generally, most Boulder Valley high schools require cell phones to be turned off during class but allow them to be used during lunch, free periods and in the halls. A new technology-use agreement for students says that "a school may temporarily hold (pending parental or same-day pick up) personal technology resources that are used inappropriately. Individual schools may choose to have additional rules and regulations pertaining to the use of personal, networked and communications resources in their respective buildings." But there is no policy that addresses whether schools can read text messages on confiscated phones. The ACLU of Colorado sent a letter Wednesday to the Boulder Valley school board demanding changes after at least 13 students reported having their cell phones taken and their text messages read at the end of last school year. Parents of those students contacted the civil rights group following the seizures. 'I'm pretty mad' Chris Wolny, an 18-year-old Monarch High senior, is one of the students whose cell phone was taken. He said the main student involved, a sophomore, sent him a text message asking if he knew where to get marijuana. Though he said his reply was "no," Wolny said he was still called to the office. When asked for his cell phone, Wolny said he handed it over and an assistant principal began reading through his text messages. He said he asked if that was legal, but the assistant principal didn't respond and didn't explain why she was looking through his phone. "They typed up all the messages I wrote," he said. "They took my phone for a week-and-a-half to two weeks. They kept saying I was under investigation." He said he was suspended for three days for drug-related activity on school grounds, though he said he replied "no" to several messages from students asking him about getting marijuana. "I'm pretty mad," he said. "They went through messages that were private." Martha McCarthy, an educational law and policy professor at Indiana University and author of "Public School Law: Teachers' and Students' Rights," said it appears the school crossed a line by reading text messages. "It's OK to confiscate and hold a cell phone," she said. "To search it, you would need to have reasonable suspicion that the student is doing something unlawful or breaking a school rule." What the ACLU says happened The American Civil Liberties Union gives the following details of the cell-phone confiscation allegations at Monarch High School: On May 24, a school security officer brought a sophomore to see Assistant Principal Drew Adams because the student was suspected of breaking two school rules -- being in a prohibited parking lot and smoking cigarettes. Adams took the student's cell phone, calling it a "distraction," and later told the student he had read text messages that made some "incriminating" mentions of marijuana. The student's mother learned Adams had written down text messages from her son's phone, and when she asked for the phone back, she said Adams insisted on keeping it over the Memorial Day weekend. When the phone eventually was returned, the student's mother discovered Adams had sent messages to her son's friends, posing as the student. After the first phone was taken, other student phones were seized, and more teens were interrogated. To read the full text of the ACLU's letter to the Boulder Valley school board, click here. CU's Ohm said it will come down to the reason school administrators give for reading the text messages. So far, the school district has not provided Monarch High's version of the incident. "Courts measure the reason for versus the invasion of the search," he said. "If this was really about smoking in the parking lot, it seems like a stretch to say you need to read messages on a phone." But, he said, it's possible the school will provide a more narrowly defined reason. As for allegations that a school administrator sent messages from a student's cell phone to other students posing as the phone's owner, he said the school is on shakier ground. "From an ethical point of view, that seems much harder to defend," he said. Boulder Valley officials said they support Monarch and its administrators, noting that the administrators contacted the district's legal counsel before confiscating student cell phones and transcribing text messages. But, Boulder Valley spokesman Briggs Gamblin said, the district is reviewing the incident. School board members who responded to a request for their position on the cell-phone issue -- Helayne Jones, Teresa Steele, Lesley Smith and Patti Smith -- all said they don't have enough information yet to take a position. But, they said, they're willing to review their policies once the district's investigation is complete. "I'm just going to wait until we're done investigating it and have everything before us," Patti Smith said. Freedom of speech at schools Professor McCarthy said recent court decisions have upheld the right of schools to discipline students for what they post online -- if there's a connection to the school. Threatening a teacher or other students on a MySpace page, for example, can get a student in trouble. She said schools also have "a lot of latitude" in censoring school-sponsored publications, needing only to show that the material is inconsistent with the school's educational mission. But to censor an "underground" student paper or a blog, the material needs to have a negative effect on the school, she said. Courts generally have rejected student challenges to school dress codes, she said, if the school can provide an educational reason such as reducing gang activity. Less clear is when students wear clothing that expresses religious beliefs, but those beliefs are contrary to school goals. For example, she said, a court recently agreed with a school that didn't allow a student to wear a shirt proclaiming homosexuality as a sin. The school argued it wanted to prevent harassment of other students. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek