Should I friend or follow my teen on social media? What are the social media basics for high school kids? Is there any social media that's good for kids? What is "Ask Me Anything"? Is it OK for my kid to start her own YouTube channel? What should parents know about Kik? What should parents know about Tumblr? What should parents know about Twitter? So we did have a different friendship, besides it was preschool not elementary school. Which is a huge difference I think.
What if your teacher set up a Facebook PAGE for the class, where she could keep you up to date on things going on in the classroom or even post pictures from time to time with the highest privacy settings set of course. Would you be comfortable with that? And if you are a teacher, would you be willing to do that?
But others argue that though Garber found in favor of the student in this particular suit, the case law on this topic has hardly been consistent. In a move that left many legal experts scratching their heads, on Feb. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit released conflicting decisions on lawsuits with extremely similar facts. Both cases involved Pennsylvania students who were suspended from school for creating MySpace pages parodying their principals.
In Layshock v. Hermitage School District, a case over a fake page created by Justin Layshock when he was a high school senior, the panel ruled in favor of the student. But in J. Blue Mountain School District, which involved a bogus profile created by a year-old middle school student, the court found in favor of the school. Attorney Anthony G. Sanchez of the Pittsburgh-based firm Andrews and Price represented the Hermitage School District in the Layshock case and said part of the problem is the quick march of technology.
One of those key cases was Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, a suit involving students who were suspended for wearing black armbands to school to protest the Vietnam War. The ruling in that case said that student speech was protected unless it would "substantially disrupt the work and discipline of the school. According to legal experts, by that ruling, student speech needs to advocate illegal activity or threaten physical harm to justify suppression.
As far as I know, there aren't any laws about not adding teachers, even when you're still one of their students. That's the joy of free speech. The easy way is to add her; if her contract or board rules dictate otherwise, she'll decline and give you the reason.
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