To begin with, the lockers are the school's property. Generally, school policies will say that while students are granted the use of the lockers, the school reserves the right to inspect the lockers to verify that prohibited items or substances are not being stored on school property. Therefore, students do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in regard to their lockers and their privacy rights are not being violated when lockers are searched. Furthermore, since most high school students are not legally adults, they are not generally regarded as being entitled to the same privacy protection that an adult might have under the same circumstances. School officials have more limited rights in searching a student's clothing or belongings carried by the student, but even there, state courts have recognized that the school may, with good reason and with proper decorum, inspect what students have on their person. Many urban schools now have metal detectors. Generally, the duty of the school to ensure the safety of all students is considered more important than the privacy rights of the individual student.
2006-09-17 07:39:17
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answer #1
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answered by just♪wondering 7
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ONLY if there is a good reason for it. Depends who checks it too. A teacher does not own the locker, the school does. Therefore without a good reason I think it would be invasion of privacy unless it is the Principal or vise Principal which it usually is because they are in the highest power at the school itself and most familiar with the school board. At my school they don't touch the lockers, they have the students empty them and show them the inside of their locker if there is suspicion and they are required to answer all questions. If the student refuses to present the inside of their locker the lock is cut off and searched with no say of the student. This is all done only when suspicious and for the safety of the students.
2006-09-17 08:08:45
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answer #2
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answered by Sarah 4
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yes they do. students may want to say that what is in there is their own personal property, but the school owns the locker and has the right to search them at any time they want.
2006-09-17 07:21:51
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answer #3
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answered by cr4is2py0 3
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I don't know about lockers but this applys to searching a student's schoolbag in Scotland:
They don't have the right but if they have any reason to be suspicious they can call police who have the right to search it.
2006-09-17 07:22:42
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, they aren't really students' lockers, they belong to the school and are used by the students.
2006-09-17 07:22:22
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answer #5
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answered by Comrade Wolf 2
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nicely, there are some diverse approaches of answering why. they have the right because they function the power-if it really is a public college, this is owned by employing the traditional public, otherwise this is lower than deepest possession. the children are in basic terms prolonged the right to apply the power for a era of time. in case you want justification, you would possibly want to assert that the college has a duty to guard the scholars from themselves, and from one yet another (in the experience that they have got reason to imagine 1 youngster has a bomb, they have a duty to inform the authorities). they actually have a duty to the mothers and fathers to verify that the children are not endangering themselves or others. also, as contributors of a community, state, and nationwide community, whoever runs the college has a wide-spread legal responsibility to regulate to the regulation, to verify that no interior reach ordinances or state or federal statutes are violated on the premises.
2016-11-27 20:19:01
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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yes becuse they belong to the school but they can't search your bookbag
2006-09-17 09:04:21
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answer #7
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answered by bj 2
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yes
2006-09-17 07:21:00
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answer #8
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answered by Mopar Muscle Gal 7
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