Sen. David Bullard, R-Durant, filed Senate Bill 588 creating the “Students’ Bill of Rights” to protect public school students from bias and prejudice in the classroom as well as students attending Oklahoma’s public colleges and universities.
“Our job as teachers is to help students learn various subjects, like math and reading, that will help them become independent, productive members of society. However, some teachers overstep their boundaries trying to indoctrinate students with socialism, hatred of America and even persuade them away from their faith,” Bullard said. “This bill clarifies that a student does not relinquish their constitutional rights at the school door. Teachers need to realize there are boundaries and their responsibility is to teach only those subjects for which they were hired, and everything else needs to be left up to parents and guardians.”
Under SB 588, students in Oklahoma public schools and public charter schools have the right to:
- A safe learning environment including freedom from bullying and threatening behavior;
- An unbiased education that does not endorse, favor or promote socialism, communism, Marxism or anti-American bias;
- An unbiased learning environment including classrooms and school-sponsored or sanctioned events free from the display of flags or propaganda of any organization or symbol of socialism, communism, Marxism or anti-American sentiment;
- Privacy protections including clothing and bodily searches;
- Public and free expression of religion, speech and peaceful assembly such as participating or leading voluntary prayers, observing moments of silence, reading the Bible or having an unbiased education that does not endorse, favor, demean or intentionally undermine any particular religion, nonreligious faith or religious perspective;
- An appropriate relationship with teachers and school employees free from criminal actions; and freedom from the use of vulgar language directed toward other individuals by students, teachers, coaches or other district employees.
The Students’ Bill of Rights would be included in school handbooks.
School boards and the governing boards of public charter schools would create a due process plan for students, parents or legal guardians and teachers to report violations of the Act. Confirmed violations by school employees would be reported to the State Department of Education, who would report any school found not in compliance as deficient on the accreditation report.
SB 614 would provide students attending any institution within the Oklahoma State System of Higher Education the right to public and free expression of religion, speech and peaceful assembly including the right to participate in religious student associations free from discrimination and engage in expressive activity on campus.