The year is 1969, America is at war in Vietnam. Having already been in the war for fourteen years, many Americans began to question, why are we still in the war and why did we get involved in the first place; it’s costing too much money and too many American lives. Protests of the war began and some protesters were even teenagers; five of which, started a big Supreme Court Case. Tinker V. Des Moines Independent Community School District was a famous court case in 1969. Five high school and middle school students wore black armbands over their clothing to protest the American involvement in the war and received expellition. Parents of these students felt like the school board was violating their child’s First Amendment rights and took this case all the way to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court ruling was 7-2 that “public school officials could not censor student expression unless it would cause a substantial …show more content…
They often quote a study at the Long Beach, California School District between the years of 1993 and 1995. Statistics show that assaults and batteries decreased by 34%, assault with a deadly weapon decreased by 50%; along with many other incidents (fighting, sex offense, robbery, and vandalism) also having significant decreases. These statistics are amazing and people should be proud of them, but these plunges in numbers did not come solely from the introduction of school uniforms. The study that found these numbers stated “it is not clear that these results are entirely attributable to the uniform policy”; at the time students began wearing uniforms, new school security methods were being implemented; along with, one million dollar project that was told to help the teaching strategies. In the Long Beach, California example there were many other factors that added towards the decrease of unacceptable