Title: Due Process Rights of Teachers
1Due Process Rights of Teachers
- Discipline, Discharge, and Evaluation
2Purpose
- To extend justice and fairness to the individual
in relationship to government - To establish a fundamental balance between the
rights of individuals and the exercise of the
police power of the state - Guaranteed by the 5th and 14th Amendments
- You cannot adversely impact (discipline) an
employee in violation of his/her constitutional
rights
3Constitutional Due Process
- Substantive Due Process
- What rights does the employee have?
- Procedural Due Process
- How can that right be removed legally
- Vagueness Test
- Is the reason for removal of the right vague?
- Irrationality and Presumption Test
- Is there a rational connection between the
4Substantive Due Process
- Essence of life, liberty, property, implicit and
explicit - Government incursion can occur only after
justification and due process
5Three Features of Substantive Due Process
- Liberty and property interests are created by an
independent source (contract, tenure laws) not
the Constitution - If liberty or property employment interest is not
created, due process is not required - If liberty or property employment interest is
created, due process is required - Bd of Regents v. Roth Perry v. Sindermann
6Liberty and Property Interests
- Liberty
- To go where you want, do what you want, without
infringing on the rights of others
- Property
- Includes land, money, merchandise, job, opinions,
expression - Everything to which a man may attach a value and
have a rightMadison
7Board of Regents v. Roth SC 1972
- An untenured assistant professor was notified
that he would not be rehired. He sued, claiming
he had a right to due process before his contract
was not renewed. - Court found for the employer
- What was the courts rationale?
8Perry v. Sindermann SC 1972
- A professor who had been employed on a series of
one year contracts was non-renewed after being
publically critical of the state governing board.
He sued requesting damages and reinstatement. - Court found for the employee.
- What was the courts rationale?
9Procedural Due Process
- Mechanics for determining truth
- Notice, opportunity to be heard, and unbiased
judge - Required when a fundamental right is suspended by
the state
10Mathews Balancing Test
- Three Levels of Application
- Private interest which is affected
- Risk of erroneous deprivation, value of
additional safeguards - States interest, function involved and burden of
additional safeguards
- Is individual entitled to a hearing prior to
action? - Is pre/post deprivation hearing required?
- Extent of proof
11What Process is Due?
- Right to a hearing before termination
(Loudermill) - Right to a union representative if requested
(Weingarten) - Right to an opportunity to improve performance
before termination (teacher termination laws
RCW) - Right to a fair, unbiased process to investigate
the truth, with fair consequences resulting (7
Tests of Just Cause, determined by arbitration
cases) - http//edu.teamster.org/seven.htm
12Test 1 Providing Notice
- Did the employer give employee forewarning of
the possible/probable consequences of the
disciplinary conduct - Implied notice is the concept that every
employee should know will not be tolerated - Socially disapproved theft, arson, property
damage, threats, assaults, sexual harassment,
firearms, selling drugs, gambling - Industrially disapproved insubordination,
leaving without permission, poor performance,
dishonesty, sabotage - Similar Offenses
13Tips for Providing Notice
- Progressive discipline
- Depart from your bargained discipline steps
cautiously - REVIEW the discipline language in the bargained
contract note details - Be consistent in which rules result in which
penalties - Past Practice can only be altered by clear,
public communication
14Should the Employee Have Known?
- http//www.comcast.net/video/teacher-writes-loser-
on-child-s-assignments/1439046655/Comcast/14390058
29/ - http//www.ksdk.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid
189813 - www.kimatv.com/news/43396642.html
- www.yourwestvalley.com/news/computer-13795-surpris
e-police.html
15The Other 7 Tests
- Reasonable Rule Is the rule reasonable?
- Investigation Did the employer make a true and
thorough effort to determine the truth? - Fair Investigation Was the investigation
conducted fairly and objectively? - Proof Was the evidence sufficient?
- Equal Treatment Are penalties given evenhandedly
without discrimination? - Penalty Was the consequence related to the
seriousness of the offense and employees past
work record?
16Do you see a problem?
- 3rd grade student reported that a teacher had
grabbed him hard enough by the arm to leave a
bruise. The principal investigated by talking to
other students in the class, who all said the
teacher was mad and did grab the student by the
arm. The principal called the teacher into his
office with her union rep and issued her a
written warning.
17Do you see a problem?
- A custodian was reported to being gone during her
shift. The principal investigated by returning
to school and looking for her every evening
looking for her, but did not see her. The
principal recommended termination for false
reporting on her time sheet. Should the
Superintendent follow his recommendation?
18Cleveland Bd v. Loudermill SC 1985
- A security guard was fired for falsifying his
application. He was not afforded the opportunity
to respond to the charge. He brought suit. - What did the court say?
- What is the Loudermill right?
19Crump v. Board of Ed SC NC 1990
- Teacher was terminated for immorality and
insubordination. He sued seeking damages,
claiming his due process rights were denied
because one member of the school board was
biased. - How did the court respond?
20Vagueness Test
- A government regulation is void because of
vagueness if its prohibitions are not clearly
defined - A law is vague if persons of common intelligence
are required to guess as to their actual meaning - No standard of conduct is specified at all
- Wiemann v. Updegraff SC 1952
- Connell v Higginbotham SC 1971
21Vague Administrator Trouble
- Come to my office around 3 pm
- You should clean up your room for the open
house - That floor looks dirty
- Id like your lesson plan to be available when I
walk in - You should change peoples perception of you
- Try to avoid doing things that make you look
like you want to groom female students -
22Irrationality/Presumptions Test
- There must be a rational connection between the
fact proved and the ultimate end presumed - The individual cannot be denied the right to
rebut an irrational presumption - Irrebuttable presumptions deny due process
- Cleveland v. Lefleur SC 1974
23Clarke v. Shoreline
- In general, Clarke v. Shoreline clarified that
there are some instances where the teacher can be
terminated without complying with the traditional
probationary procedure and plan of assistance
outlined by statute. - Previously, an argument could be made that a
teacher must be put on a plan of improvement
before he/she could be terminated
24Clarke v. Shoreline WA SC 1986
- Sufficient cause for a teachers discharge
exists as a matter of law when the teachers
deficiency is unremediable, and - Materially and substantially affects the
teachers performance, OR - Lacks any positive educational aspect or
legitimate professional purpose. - In such cases, the teacher is deemed to have
materially breached his promise to teach and can
be discharged without compliance with the
probationary procedures of RCW 28A.67.065.
25Hoagland v Mt. Vernon SC WA 1981
- Whether a teachers conduct provides sufficient
cause for his discharge shall be determined by
considering - Age and maturity of the students
- Existence and degree of adverse effects upon
students and other teachers - The period of time elapsed since the conduct
occurred - The circumstances surrounding the conduct and its
likelihood of repetition - The teachers motives, and
- The effect of the conduct on the rights of the
teacher involved and other teachers
26Washington State Resources
- http//www.k12.wa.us/ProfPractices/investigations/
DisciplinaryAction.aspx - http//www.k12.wa.us/ProfPractices/CodeConduct.asp
x
27Discipline v Evaluation
- What does the process matter? Why cant we use
both? - Different Terminology and Processes for
Certificated Employees - Performance Nonrenewal for remedial teaching
deficiencies - Discharge for nonremedial behavior that has a
substantial adverse impact on performance or for
behavior that has no legitimate professional
purpose - Nonrenewal for misconduct and performance
issues with provisional employees
28Discharge v Performance Nonrenewal
- Requires either progressive discipline or severe
single incident - Can occur anytime during the contract
- Notice must specify the Reasons for the Discharge
- Requires an initial unsatisfactory evaluation and
a probationary plan of improvement - The plan of improvement must give the employee an
opportunity to improve - Notice of nonrenewal by May 15
29Evaluation Tips
- Know your evaluation criteria
- Take deliberate notes
- Use the following formula
- I have a concern with(cite criteria from
evaluation) - An example is (cite the example from your notes)
- This is important because(provide reason)
- It is recommended that (provide your suggestion
for remediation)
30Examples
- Instructional Skill
- Concern No observable lesson objectives.
- Example The lesson began without a statement to
the class of what they were going to learn or of
what the objective was. Your stated objective to
the students was that you wanted them to have
fun. Having fun is not one of our essential
learning requirements! - Rationale It is important to have observable
lesson objectives because students will learn
better if they know what is expected. - Suggestion I recommend that you include lesson
objectives in your planning for this unit and
that you provide plans to me by insert date.
- Handling of Student Discipline and Attendant
Problems -
- Strength The students followed established
District policies for their conduct. - Example I noticed on four different occasions
that students made comments to others about
observing the rules on the classroom wall and
that students efficiently responded to your
reward and consequence system. -
- Rationale It is important to have established
guidelines and discipline in the classroom
because student learning time is increased
without needless discipline distractions. -
- Suggestion Please keep up the effective
implementation of your discipline system.
31Its Discipline IF. (adapted from Paul Clay, and
Staci Vesneske)
- You have to ask Dr. Ruth what it means
- The track coach thought it would be funny to
accidentally say that a female athletes shorts
were too skimpy for her pubic instead of saying
they were too skimpy for the public - The band teacher goes to his car between each
period because he likes to drink bottled water
thats been sitting in a car for a few hours - The lead prosecuting attorney is on line 1
- Somebodys ASB account shows a purchase of a new
62 plasma TVjust in time for March Madness,
BABY. - The low-cal, fiber rich brownies at the
faculty party were groovy. - The kindergarten teacher says the little S
deserved everything he got!
32Its only Discipline IF
- The administrative assistant tells you to call
Dr. Howards hotel room in Aruba, and Charlie
Shreck calls you right back. - The improvement plan is Stop doing that, you
idiot! - Taking an interest in kids lives involves
texting them, sending emails, and creating a
personal MySpace, marked private to you, the
principal - Youve now said three times, I cant believe you
did that AGAIN!!! - A reporter for the Seattle Times has just a few
questions - The teacher says Whats the big deal? Kids get
worse bruises dirty dancing at the semester break
mixer! - A parent calls to ask how the movie American
Pie is related to the 9th grade language arts
curriculum. - Larry, the Math teacher, points his finger at
you, looks you straight in the eye, saying I
was ONLY practicing my tap routine in the airport
restroom! -