I'm going to flaunt my limited knowledge on this topic. In the court case 'Bethel School District v. Fraser' (1983), where a student sued after his school suspended him for giving a speech they considered lewd, the Supreme court ruled that a public school has the right to monitor and control what their students say. Public institutions (schools) are allowed to suppress their students rights to free speech.
(http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/firstamendment/bethel.html)
An excerpt from his speech:
"I know a man who is firm - he's firm in his pants, he's firm in his shirt, his character is firm - but most [of] all, his belief in you the students of Bethel, is firm. Jeff Kuhlman is a man who takes his point and pounds it in. He drives hard... "
This means that by the United States Justice System, Public Schools (Public Institutions) are allowed to take away their students Free Speech rights. Schooling is mandatory, which means that by being under 18 in the US, you have no rights to free speech during schooling.
However, in a later case 'Morse v. Frederick' (2007), this was contested. A student holding a banner reading "Bong hits for Jesus" off school property was suspended for the content on that banner in a public institution.
(http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/06-278.ZS.html)
The case was between the student (Frederick) and the principal (Morse), and it went to the Ninth Circuit (which is a big deal, while less than Supreme Court), where the court ruled that schools were allowed to control their student's free speech wherever they wanted.
This invalidates any arguments that support Cyber-bullying as free speech. It is also another topic of discussion.
While I obviously agree to some extent with your points, you really ought to be more careful in your research.
This means that by the United States Justice System, Public Schools (Public Institutions) are allowed to take away their students Free Speech rights. Schooling is mandatory, which means that by being under 18 in the US, you have no rights to free speech during schooling.
Flimsy. The ruling isn't about all free speech, only free speech that is significantly disruptive to the school environment. Whether or not they draw the line in the correct place is definitely up for question, but this is not a case of free speech not existing at all, as it (in a more general sense)
has been upheld in Supreme Court decisions.
The case was between the student (Frederick) and the principal (Morse), and it went to the Ninth Circuit (which is a big deal, while less than Supreme Court), where the court ruled that schools were allowed to control their student's free speech wherever they wanted.
No, not "wherever they wanted". The incident in this case was during a
school-sponsored and supervised event, so effectively within the school's jurisdiction. Sorry.
There are definitely concerns here, but let's at least try not to be reactionary and misinformed about it.