Sign In
    Wisconsin Lawyer
    October 01, 2001

    Wisconsin Lawyer October 2001: School Expulsions: Not all are Equal

     

    School Expulsions: Not all are Equal


    What happens to a student facing expulsion depends upon whether the student is in regular or special education. It also may depend upon whether the student's lawyer is aware of the interplay between special education law and a school board's expulsion power.

    by Alison Julien & Patricia Enge

    StudentJohn is an eighth-grade student in public school. His teacher sends him to the principal's office after seeing John writing names on a sheet of paper with the words "kill list" across the top. When questioned by the teacher, the students on the list verify that there has been some teasing and pushing between John and these students. During his meeting with the principal, John admits that he wrote the list in an effort to stop the teasing but denies any intention of hurting anyone. The principal, however, calls John's mother, tells her that John is suspended, and asks her to pick up John from school. When John's mother arrives, the principal informs her that he plans to begin expulsion proceedings. The next day, John and his parents receive certified letters stating that John has been suspended for the next 10 days, and that the expulsion hearing is scheduled for the following week. After reading the notice, John's mother contacts a lawyer.

    What happens to John will depend upon whether he is in regular education or special education. It also may depend upon whether his attorney is aware of the interplay between special education law and the school board's expulsion power.



    The number of expulsions in Wisconsin schools has more than tripled since the 1991-1992 school year.1 Because of this dramatic increase, more attorneys are likely being called on to represent students and parents in expulsion proceedings. What many lawyers may not know, however, is that expulsion law differs dramatically when dealing with special education students.

    Although it is not possible to describe the entire reach of special education law or school disciplinary procedures within the scope of this article, this article describes the impact of special education law on an expulsion proceeding so that practitioners are better prepared to advise clients. To illustrate the process, the article considers what would happen to John under three different scenarios.

    Page 2: Expulsion - Regular Education >


Join the conversation! Log in to comment.

News & Pubs Search

-
Format: MM/DD/YYYY