Heraldnet.com
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2008 8:24 am
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
The Buzz
It's a modern Stone Age
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: The Big Three have already lost vote of consumer
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Everett retirees ready to serve kids Thanksgiving feast
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Wednesday


Kimberly-Clark keeps closer eye on its Everett ...
Owners protest Monroe plan for 'potentially dan...
Marysville man charged in fatal shooting of 6-y...
Tuesday


Girl, 6, fatally shot; father jailed
Century-old Arlington house succumbs to flames
In Snohomish and other cities, sales tax revenu...
Monday


Economy forces teens to cope with smaller allow...
Tax hike sought to clean up Puget Sound
Oso residents want to use old school as communi...
Sunday


Monroe may toughen rules for some dog breeds
County preparations kept flood rescues to minimum
It's playtime, maties
Saturday


A mom and dad of her own
Deal likely to avert strike of Boeing engineers
Sultan eliminates its police department
Friday


Snohomish County flooding was less severe than ...
Water warning a pain for some Snohomish restaur...
Arlington High's 'Peter Pan' takes to the air
Thursday


Snohomish County flooding isn't over yet
Gas leak forces kids from school
Skate America brought county about $3 million f...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Nation & World   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Do you have a news tip?
newstips@heraldnet.com | 425.339.3400
 
Published: Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Cyber-bullying: How much control do schools have?

LOS ANGELES -- On a sunny May afternoon, teenagers dismissed from a Beverly Hills middle school gathered outside a restaurant four blocks away and gossiped about their friends.

Amid lots of giggling, the conversation among the eighth-graders touched on the prom and limousines but was dominated by an unflattering assessment of a girl at school, who was called a "spoiled brat" and a "slut."

"I don't hate her, it's just, I wouldn't prefer to hang out with her for a million years," one girl declared.

"She thinks she's so pretty, she's so spoiled," another said.

What might have been just another typical middle school moment became a serious headache for school officials when one of the students uploaded the conversation as a video on YouTube. Because of the Internet posting, Beverly Vista School officials found themselves grappling with their responsibility to ensure a student's well-being and the ambiguous limits of their authority on the Web.

Citing cyber-bullying concerns, school administrators suspended for two days the student who uploaded the video, without disciplining others in the recording. The suspended student sued the school district in June, saying her free speech rights were violated.

"The speech for which plaintiff was punished was not 'student speech' at all and cannot be regulated or controlled by defendants," attorneys wrote in the suit.

Sarah Kaatz, a Monterey-based attorney who represents and counsels school districts, said she receives two or three queries a month from confused and frustrated school administrators seeking legal advice on such matters.

"School districts are between a rock and a hard place on this issue," Kaatz said.

In an Idaho case, for example, parents sued a school district over its failure to intervene in their daughter's harassment, which included, among other things, spreading photos and rumors on the Internet about the girl's sexual orientation. The court sided with the school, saying officials did not have "substantial control" over the dissemination of the photos.

As computer, video and cell phone use among students has increased in recent years, so have allegations of cyber-bullying. According to a survey released last year by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, one in three teenagers who use the Internet said they have experienced some form of online harassment.

Some experts have even called it a public health concern, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funding research on electronic aggression among young people.

The "classic situation" that many school districts face, Kaatz said, is teenagers using MySpace from their home computers to start a negative campaign against a fellow student, posting nasty comments, starting rumors or creating a fake profile page for the victim for the purpose of spreading false information.

One of the most notorious cases of alleged cyber-bullying occurred in Missouri and led a 13-year-old girl to commit suicide. In that case, however, the alleged tormentor was not another student but the mother of one who was posing as a 16-year-old boy, authorities said. Federal prosecutors in Los Angeles earlier this year filed criminal charges against the woman, Lori Drew, for using the Beverly Hills-based MySpace site "to inflict emotional distress" on the girl, causing her death.

In cases involving students, experts say, many of the conflicts are not much different from youngsters simply calling one another names outside school. But the Web has catapulted such fights to a new dimension, where slander becomes far more public and can be forwarded and reproduced in a matter of seconds.

Tom Hutton, legal counsel for the National School Boards Association, said courts generally have held school officials to "very high standards" of proof in demonstrating whether they had a reason to assert their authority outside school.

He said school officials "have to make a snap decision at times. ... That's a very tricky calculus to make."

1. Marysville man charged in fatal shooting of 6-year-old daughter
2. Stillaguamish tribal leaders face federal charges
3. Victim's family to probe Everett police shooting
4. Owners protest Monroe plan for 'potentially dangerous' dogs
5. The Silvertips' power of the 'stache
6. County jobless rate climbs
7. Kimberly-Clark keeps closer eye on its Everett wood pile
8. Century-old home burns in Arlington
9. Analyst's remarks help push Boeing shares down 4 percent
10. Tribes a small part of hunting
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Edmonds' Pink House staying put
King's wins first state volleyball title
RV in plain sight? City says 'That's illegal'
Timberwolves take Class 4A title
Mavs can't hang on against Capital
TV success shares life as artist, geek
Education at Fircrest Rehabilitation Center in question
Edmonds police pulled over murder victim, suspect
T-birds, Scots break school records at state
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT