Murray v. Pittsburgh Board of Public Education

919 F. Supp. 838, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7530, 1996 WL 143543
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 25, 1996
DocketCivil Action 94-2157
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 919 F. Supp. 838 (Murray v. Pittsburgh Board of Public Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Pittsburgh Board of Public Education, 919 F. Supp. 838, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7530, 1996 WL 143543 (W.D. Pa. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

LANCASTER, District Judge.

This action arises under the Civil Rights Act of 1871, 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff, Diane Murray, is a high school English teacher employed by the Pittsburgh Board of Public Education. She challenges a school policy that prohibits her from using a classroom management technique called “Learn-ball”; organizing an after-school activity called a “Learnball Superbowl”; and displaying Learnball symbols, literature, and related paraphernalia in her classroom. Plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment that the policy constitutes an unconstitutional restraint of free speech in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. She also seeks permanent injunctive relief.

The matter was tried without a jury on February 13, 14, and 16, 1996. For the reasons that follow, the court finds that defendants’ policy does not violate plaintiffs constitutionally protected right to free speech, and accordingly, the court will enter *842 judgment in favor of defendants and against plaintiff.

I.

In accordance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 52, the' following constitutes the findings by the court. Additional findings will be discussed throughout this memorandum in context.

Plaintiff is a tenured high school English teacher employed by the Pittsburgh Board of Public Education (“Board”) and assigned to Letsche Alternative Learning Center (“Letsche” or “School”). Letsche is an alternative high school that provides instruction for at-risk students who have had trouble at their home schools or who have had legal problems. Letsche also has a program for pregnant students.

Plaintiff is a proponent of a classroom management technique known as Leamball. Leamball is organized along a sports format. It requires a styrofoam ball and a plastic backboard and hoop, which are marked with the Learnball-registered logo. Students divide into teams, elect team leaders, and compete for points which are awarded for such things as coming to class on time, completing assignments on time, and scoring baskets. Students who perform well academically and obey class mies are rewarded with Leamball merit certificates, are permitted to play a radio in the classroom, and are permitted to shoot baskets in the classroom. Leamball can also involve an activity called a “Leam-ball Superbowl.” This is an after-school activity organized along the Leamball format that involves teams which compete against each other as in the classroom. It also involves talent shows and other displays of student talent.

Leamball is purely a motivational technique; .it does not affect the manner in which a teacher presents course material. Leam-ball strategies, such as playing the radio, shooting baskets, winning merit certificates, and scoring points, are used solely to motivate students and do not alter the way in which the students are instructed.

Teachers who want to utilize the Leamball technique must become members of the “Leamball League International” of which plaintiff is an officer. Membership requires a fee of approximately $85 to cover the cost of Leamball materials, such as the Leamball Handbook and other literature and an adhesive Learnball-registered logo. The Leam-ball League International directs member teachers to participating toy stores that sell the required hoop and foam ball. Teachers are not authorized to use the Leamball technique without becoming members of the Leamball League International, without the required hoop and ball, or without the handbook and accompanying literature. The only teacher in the Pittsburgh Public School District who is currently a member of the Leamball League International is plaintiff, and no other teacher has approached the Superintendent of Pittsburgh Public Schools about using Leamball.

Plaintiff began using Leamball at Letsche in 1976. Shortly before the start of the 1988 school year, however, Mr. Vernon Phillips, who was then Principal of Letsche, notified plaintiff that effective the first day of the school year she could no longer use Leam-ball in her classes. He stated that the Board did not approve of Leamball and that in his opinion Leamball did not benefit the students.

In response to Mr. Phillips’s directive, plaintiff filed suit in this court — similar to the instant suit — to enjoin the Board and numerous school officials from prohibiting her use of Leamball. Additionally, she filed a union grievance under the collective bargaining agreement. The end result of this prior round of litigation was that plaintiff was prohibited from using the Leamball technique in the classroom.

In August 1994, for reasons that are unclear, plaintiff formed the belief that she had permission to resume Leamball. Plaintiff began using Leamball in her classes without informing the new school principal, Dr. William Nicholson, that she intended to use Leamball and without receiving his permission to use Leamball. At the same time, plaintiff began discussing with students and faculty the possibility of organizing an after-school Leamball Superbowl. In addition, she began organizing small, daily Leamball *843 contests in her classroom in preparation for the after-school event.

Sometime thereafter, Dr. Nicholson observed a student in plaintiffs classroom reading aloud from a Learnball teaching manual. He also observed a Learnball hoop and sty-rofoam ball in plaintiffs classroom, as well as other Learnball literature, symbols, and paraphernalia. That same day, Dr. Nicholson told plaintiff that he would not allow Learn-ball to be used as a motivational strategy at Letsche. He ordered her to remove from the School budding all Learnball literature and equipment, including basketballs, goals, and backboards.

In addition, Dr. Nicholson told plaintiff that, for reasons similar to those that underlay his decision to prohibit Learnball as a classroom management technique, he would not authorize a Learnball Superbowl as a school-sponsored, after-school activity. Dr. Nicholson did, however, inform plaintiff that she could apply to the Board’s Executive Director of Business Affairs for an after-school budding permit to use the School to stage a Learnbad Superbowl as a privately sponsored event, not affiliated with the School. Plaintiff did not file an application for a budding permit. Instead, she filed this lawsuit.

II.

A.

Plaintiff contends that because teachers at Letsche are encouraged to decorate then-classrooms with inspirational newspaper articles, quotations, pictures, art work, and students’ work, the classroom is a “designated open public forum.” Plaintiff contends, therefore, that she has a First Amendment right to, among other things, use the Learn-bad motivational technique in her classroom, to display Learnball symbols and literature in her classroom, to use articles she authored on Learnball to instruct students in writing, and to use class time to advocate for Learn-bad and generate enthusiasm for it. According to plaintiff, these activities constitute constitutionally protected speech the regulation of which must pass strict scrutiny.

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Bluebook (online)
919 F. Supp. 838, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7530, 1996 WL 143543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-pittsburgh-board-of-public-education-pawd-1996.