School officials forced a female student to give up her password after she posted about a mean hall monitor and flirted with a classmate on Facebook, even though the post and conversation happened off-campus and after school hours
A Minnesota teen is getting a $70,000 payday because school administrators demanded her Facebook password to investigate her social media history when she was caught doing totally normal tween things in sixth grade.
Riley Stratton, now 15, was questioned by school administrators and a police officer after posting on Facebook that she hated a mean school hall monitor and had a sexually-charged conversation with a boy in her class. This was a shocking allegation, since everyone knows that sixth grade girls LOVE hall monitors and HATE flirting with boys.
Administrators demanded that she tell them her Facebook password so they could investigate her social media history, even though both the post and the conversation happened off-campus and outside of school hours. “I was in tears,” Stratton told the Star Tribune Tuesday, “I was embarrassed when they made me give over my password.”
The ACLU took up Stratton’s case, and won her $70,000 in damages from the school district, and the administration has promised to rewrite its privacy policies. “A lot of schools, like the folks at Minnewaska, think that just because it’s easier to know what kids are saying off campus through social media somehow means the rules have changed, and you can punish them for what they say off campus,” said Wallace Hilke, the Minnesota ACLU lawyer who argued Stratton’s case. “They punished her for doing exactly what kids have done for 100 years — complaining to her friends about teachers and administrators.”
Minnewaska Superintendent Greg Schmidt did not admit any district liability in the incident, but said the case highlights the debate over how big a role schools should play in parenting their students, especially when it comes to delicate issues like cyberbullying.
“Some people think schools go too far and I get that,” Schmidt told the Star Tribune. “But we want to make kids aware that their actions outside school can be detrimental.”
Now, thanks to the justice team at the ACLU, tweens everywhere can sleep at night knowing their principal will never see their steamy convos with Josh from P.E.
I think it was completely wrong of the school to ask the 6th grade girl for her facebook password. That is her own private property and honestly what did she really do wrong? Like the article said she was doing what kids have been doing forever, complaining about school, just because it was on a social media network does not change anything.
ReplyDeleteAsking for the girl's password to her Facebook was a violation of her privacy and completely uncalled for. She was doing what every teenage girl does...complain about school and flirt with boys.
ReplyDeletei think that if the facebook action happened outside of school the school has no right to her private property.
ReplyDeleteOur school policy says that they will punish bullying on and off school grounds. I absolutely disagree with this because if something happens outside of school hours, they should have no say in a punishment. That is an invasion of privacy for us as students.
ReplyDeleteThis relates to schools everywhere. It takes cases like these to bring schools down off of their pedestals. For some reason the invention of the internet means that personal privacy means nothing to the government and schools. I can think of a situation where ACGC over steped it's boundaries with the punishment of one student. It happens everywhere.
ReplyDeleteIt was an invasion of privacy to ask the girl for her password. I'm sure it was worth it for her now though.
ReplyDeleteI agree with what happened, they don't have the right to take passwords. I'm glad she would case
ReplyDeleteI think it's totally to take a 6th graders Facebook cause what are 6th graders doing that they need to take hers
ReplyDeleteThey didn't have the right to take her password it happened out of school. They shouldn't get invovled if it didn't happen in school.
ReplyDeletethe school got caught overstepping their boundries and paid the price
ReplyDelete