CyberSense Karen Haase Harding & Shultz (402) 434-3000 khaase@hslegalfirm.com H & S School Law
This is not your y Grandma’s assemblyy
Agenda < Social Networking < CyberBullying < Sexting
Social Networkingg < Examples p - MySpace - Facebook - YouTube - Twitter
Teacher Use < Causes for Concern - Drug/Alcohol Use - Sexual S l Inappropriateness I i t - Inappropriate pp p Communication with Students - Inappropriate Communication Comm nication about Students - Selling School Property
Social Media is Here to Stay y ď&#x192;&#x2DC; Ed. Professionals are using social media - 85% of Americans use social media monthly - Twitter grew over 500% in the last year - More video is uploaded to YouTube in 60 days than big 3 networks created in 60 years
ď&#x192;&#x2DC; Facebook dominates social media -
500 million users as of July, y, 2010 50% of active users log on daily Average g user has 130 friends Largest group of users aged 35-54
Nebraska Law < Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 79-824,, 79-827,, 79-829 < Reasons for Termination and/or Cancellation: - Unprofessional Conduct - Immorality - Other conduct which interferes substantially with the continued performance of duties
Caselaw < Fisher,, 476 F.2d 375 ((8th Cir. 1973): ) Withoutt a connection With ti between b t th the teacherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s misconduct and the school districtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s interest, a teacher may be able to argue g that the reasons underlying y g dismissal were arbitrary and capricious.
Free Speech p
Free Speech p < Pickering, g, 391 U.S. 563 ((1968)) If a employee l speaks k as a citizen ii on a matter of public concern the district must show it had an adequate justification for treatingg the employee p y differently y from any other member of the public.
Free Speech p < Garcetti,, 547 U.S. 410 ((2006)) When public Wh bli employees l make k statements t t t pursuant to their official duties, the employees are not speaking as citizens for First Amendment p purposes, p , and the Constitution does not insulate their communication from employer discipline.
Myy Suggestions gg < Make a p professional p page g separate p from your personal page < Don’t D ’t “f “friend” i d” students t d t or parents t on yyour p personal p page g < Don’t let yourself be depicted beha ing unprofessionally behaving nprofessionall < Ask: will this affect myy classroom?
Privacyy Settings g < < < <
Set yyour profile p as “private” p Only let “friends” see pics T Turn off ff geo-tags t Friend Facebook on Facebook
Cyberbullying
Bullying? â&#x20AC;&#x153;any any ongoing pattern of physical, verbal, or electronic abuse on school grounds, in a vehicle hi l owned, d leased, l d or contracted t t db by a school beingg used for a school p purpose p by a school employee or his or her designee or at school-sponsored designee, activities or school-sponsored athletic events.â&#x20AC;?
Cyberbullying? Cyberbullying, v: the use of technology such as computers and cell phones to engage in i repeated, t d and dh hostile til b behavior h i byy an individual or group, g p that is intended to harm others. The term "cyberbullying" cyberbullying is used when the victim or bully is a child or teen. The term cyber harassment is used when the victim is an adult.
Cyberbullying y y g Example of cyberbullying b b ll i on iChat (Appleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s instant messaging) i )
Divagirl: Hey, loser, watch your back. t t323 What tmt323: Wh t r u talking about? Divagirl: Why don't you kill yourself while u r ahead? tmt323: Why can't you just leave me alone? Divagirl: Ugly girls like u need to be put in their place.
How Common is Cyberbullying? ď&#x192;&#x2DC; one in four students between the g of 11 and 19 have been the ages victim of cyberbullying. ď&#x192;&#x2DC; Approximately A i t l 65 percentt off kids kid know of someone who has been cyberbullied.
Not Myy Students! Tell teacher: 27% of preteens and only 9% of teens Tell friend: 44% of preteens and 72% of teens Told no one: 16% of preteens and teens
So whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s what s the big deal?
Bullying y g Litigation g < < < < <
Duty to Protect/Practice or Policy Sex Harassment IDEA State tort claims Overbroad policy
Duty to Protect/ Practice or Policy < Esposito v. Town of Bethany (Conn. 2010) < Yap v. Oceanside Union Free Sch. Dist., i (E.D. ( N.Y. 2004) < Vaughn g v. Orleans Parish Sch. Bd.,, (La. Ct. App. 2002) < Dorothy J. J v. v Little Rock Sch. Sch Dist., Dist (8th Cir. 1993)
J.C. v. Beverly Hills Unif. Sch. Dist. (Cal.) 8th grade girls talking smack about a peer; uploaded l d d tto Y YouTube T b Principal p suspended p student who uploaded Court: no disruption to school school, no nexus to education, no basis for punishment
School-Related Consequences Neb. Rev. Stat. 79-2,137 Definition: “ongoing ongoing pattern of physical, verbal or electronic abuse” Consequences: ─ Loss of extracurricular privileges ─ Detentions D t ti ─Short and Long Term Suspension ─Expulsion E li ─Alternative School Assignment
Examples p Seattle, WA.: Students who “liked” Facebook page bullying a classmate p all suspended Memphis TN: Honors student suspended for 180 days for commenting on a friend’s status
Civil Consequences q Student and parents can be sued • Suing for money; no jail time • Homeowners insurance often pays • Judgments can result in home f foreclosure l and d other h h hardship d hi Suit can be for: • Intentional I i l infliction i fli i off emotional i l distress • Tortuous interference • Slander
D.C. v. R.S. (Cal. 2010) High school student posted on victim’s website • • •
I want to rip out your f-ing f ing heart and feed it to you. I' wanted I've t d to t kill you. If I ever see yyou I'm ggoing g to pound p your head in with an ice pick.
Family sued; defendant said just a joke Litigation allowed to continue
Fulmer v. Swidler (Pa. 2003) Middle school student created Teacher Sux Sux” website “Teacher • • •
Compared math teacher to Hitler Had picture of her decapitated Asked for contributions toward hit man
Teacher sued Jury awarded $500,000 Similar suit by principal settled
Criminal Consequences (State Law) Neb. Rev. Stat. 28-311.01 Terroristic Threats: “threatens to commit any crime of violence … • With the intent to terrorize another • In reckless disregard of the risk of causing such terror Class IV Felony punishable by: • Up to 5 years in prison and/or • $10,000 fine
State v. Murphy (NE) Girl’s family disliked defendant On O MySpace M S he h wrote: t • He was ggoingg to "beat the hell out of a lot of people" • He would be "killing killing a lot of people people.“ • Told girlfriend’s sister he didn’t “want to end d up killi killing her h or her h kid.” kid ”
Charged with making terroristic threats
Bullying: What can staff do? Keep “Responding and Reporting” separate in your mind Focus on Small Stuff Talk to kids about tech Talk T lk tto kids kid about b t managing i anger Start with elementaryy kids Communicate to kids that you care about this issue Enlist kids
If you discover bullying Do not close your eyes Report R t tto administration d i i t ti asap Document ocu e t everything eve yt g
Does the Victim Need Interventions? Inerventions • Social S i skill i training i i • Hygiene yg training g with sped p teacher, counselor or other staff • Peer mentor Be ready for a 504 or SpEd request
Sexting
Sexting? Se t g, v: (a co Sexting, combination b at o oof se sex and texting) is the act of sending sexually ll explicit li i messages or photos h electronically, primarily between cell phones.
Sexting ď&#x20AC;żMaterial can be distributed via:
-Text messages -Downloads onto laptops/computers -E-mail -Downloads D l d onto t ii-pods/mp-3 d/ 3 players l -Social Networking Sites
How Common is Sexting? g Sexually suggestive photos sent: – 20% overall –22% girls –11% young teen girls (ages 13-16) –18 % boys
How Common is Sexting? g Sexually suggestive messages sent: –39% of all teens –37% girls –40% 40% boys 48% of teens say they have received sexting ti photos h t or messages.
Serious Consequences: Jessica Logan
Criminal Implications Under Nebraska Law NEB. REV. STAT. 28-813: Class IV felony to:
─ knowingly solicit, coax, entice, or lure ─ a child sixteen years of age or y younger g ─ by means of an electronic communication device ─ to t postt images i that th t would ld qualify lif as child pornography under state law
Criminal Implications Under Nebraska Law Affirmative Defense:
─ the picture is only of the defendant;
─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─
or defendant was younger than 19 picture i is i off someone at least l 15 picture was taken voluntarily picture was given voluntarily picture contains only one child defendant hasn’t shared the picture; AND d f d defendant did didn’t ’ coerce taking ki or sending di
Practical Steps in Dealing with i Sexting S i in i Schools S When You Catch Kids Sexting
CyberSense Karen Haase Harding & Shultz (402) 434-3000 khaase@hslegalfirm.com H & S School Law