For decades, students have organized school walkouts to protest injustice and to demand policy change, including within their own schools.

Students in public schools do not lose their First Amendment free-speech rights when they go to school. But those rights are more limited than they would be outside of school. That’s largely to allow the school to carry-out its mission of educating students and to operate in an orderly fashion.

Over the years, courts have established fairly clear rules for what, when, where and how you can exercise your speech rights in school. Generally, you have the right to speak out as long as you do not substantially and materially disrupt school operations. This includes the right to distribute flyers and petitions and wear expressive clothing in school. And these rights apply even when you are speaking about controversial topics or protesting the school’s own policies and actions.

The school can also require you to follow “content-neutral policies,” which means rules that have nothing to do with the message you express. Examples of “content-neutral” rules a school can impose include dress codes, restrictions on leaving the school without permission, or rules prohibiting posting anything on the walls. So, for example, a school can prohibit you from wearing hats, but if it allows hats, it can’t prohibit you from wearing only pink pussycat hats or pro-NRA hats because those rules would be based on the hat’s message. And a school can punish you for disrupting class by speaking out of turn or leaving the building without a pass, even if you were speaking out of turn or leaving the building in order to make a political statement.  Furthermore, the school can discipline you for communicating with vulgar or lewd words or imagines or promoting illegal drug use.  The school does not offense the constitution when it gives you a detention for dropping an F-bomb or encouraging friends to get high.

School responses to student walkouts, including the recent gun safety demonstrations, may or may not be unconstitutional, depending on the specific facts. Here’s some guidance on the legality of different types of school responses to student walkouts.

1. If students who participated in a walk-out were given the SAME punishment they would have gotten if they left class without permission for any other reason (like cutting class): This is allowable. If your school normally doesn’t allow you to leave the building without permission, then you don’t have any special right to do so to engage in a political demonstration. But just because the school is authorized to punish you doesn’t mean they have to, so it’s worth asking for mercy.

2. If students who participated in a walk-out were punished MORE SEVERELY than if they had left for any other reason: This may be illegal. The ACLU of Florida believes that it violates the First Amendment for schools to impose harsher punishment on students who leave class to engage in political activities than on those who cut class for another reason. If you believe this happened to you, please let us know so we can gather more information.

3. If student organizers were punished more severely than other participants: This may be illegal. The ACLU of Florida does not believe schools can punish students who helped organize a walk-out more severely than other participants in the walk-out simply because of their leadership role. If this happened to you, please let us know so we can gather more information.

4. If the school punishes students who walk out to protest the school’s own policies or practices more severely than students who walk out for other reasons: This may be illegal. The ACLU of Florida does not believe schools can punish their critics more severely merely because they are criticizing the school. If you believe you were punished unfairly because of your criticism of the school, please let us know so we can gather more information.

5. If teachers blocked students from leaving class or leaving the building, so students did not get to participate in the walk-out the way they wanted: This is probably allowable. Most schools have rules that prohibit students from leaving class or the building without permission. If the school knows you are going to violate this or any other rule, they may take reasonable steps to prevent the rule violation. But this doesn’t mean that the school’s decision to prevent students from protesting was a wise one. You have the right to criticize the school, including by talking to media, using your own time and resources when you are not at school. Also, if your parent had already signed you out of school and you had permission to leave and you were still blocked from leaving, please let us know.

6. If students were not allowed to carry any signs during the walk out: Generally, students should be allowed to have signs, as long as they aren’t too big or otherwise displayed in a way that disrupts school operations or violates content-neutral rules, like rules against posting signs on the walls. If you were prohibited from displaying a sign, please let us know so we can gather more information.

7. If the school allowed students to walk out of class and gather somewhere inside the school to protest (like the gym or cafeteria) but punished students who walked out of school: This is probably allowable. Presumably, your school has rules against walking out of class before it ends, or leaving the school, without permission. Just because they chose to relax the rules to allow you to attend a school-sponsored demonstration doesn’t mean they have to relax the rule about leaving the building. If you walked out against the rules, the school is authorized to punish you in the same way they would if you cut class.

8. If only students with parental permission could participate in the walk-out without discipline: This is probably allowable. Schools can choose not to punish students who leave class or leave the building with their parents’ permission while punishing students who do so without permission. This especially makes sense when it comes to leaving the building during the day because, if something happened to you while you were in the school’s care, your parents might be able to hold the school responsible.