Foul Language Distracts from the Purpose of Learning
Arizona teachers had better watch their mouths. A group of Republican legislators from this state are pushing new legislation that will penalize public school teachers for not complying with the Federal Communications Commission’s regulations on speech and profanity. Labeled Senate Bill 1467, the legislation will create a three-strike rule against teachers who feel the need to drop f-bombs in the classroom. Arizona may have a history of unusually harsh laws (SB 1070 comes to mind), but this bill was created with a purpose — legislators decided to take action after repeatedly hearing complaints about teachers using inappropriate language during school hours. And the limits they’ve set are hardly absurd. According to the FCC, profanity is defined as any language “so grossly offensive to members of the public who actually hear it as to amount to a nuisance.” Clearly, the teacher misconduct already reported to the legislators posed a nuisance — this would simply regulate speech in a way that has been done since the FCC’s formation in 1934. Regulating speech that children are regularly exposed to is not a new feat. In Bethel School District No. 403 v. Fraser in 1986, the courts upheld the suspension of Matthew Fraser, a student who presented a “lewd” campaign speech during a student election. According to the courts, the way the speech was delivered in front of the large 600-student audience went against school values. Undoubtedly, this case will be brought up in deciding SB 1467. The classroom is a place for children to learn — profanity and obscene language, when spoken as expletives, are merely distractions. If regulations can be placed on television, which children watch in their spare time, it isn’t unreasonable to place similar regulations on teachers working during federally mandated hours. — Margaret Yau Managing EditorAmbiguity of Measure Violates Teachers’ Free Speech