Westside High School, a public secondary school that receives
federal financial assistance, permits its students to join, on a
voluntary basis, a number of recognized groups and clubs, all of
which meet after school hours on school premises. Citing the
Establishment Clause and a School Board policy requiring clubs to
have faculty sponsorship, petitioner school officials denied the
request of respondent Mergens for permission to form a Christian
club that would have the same privileges and meet on the same terms
and conditions as other Westside student groups, except that it
would have no faculty sponsor. After the Board voted to uphold the
denial, respondents, current and former Westside students, brought
suit seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. They alleged,
inter alia, that the refusal to permit the proposed club
to meet at Westside violated the Equal Access Act, which prohibits
public secondary schools that receive federal assistance and that
maintain a "limited open forum" from denying "equal access" to
students who wish to meet within the forum on the basis of the
"religious, political, philosophical, or other content" of the
speech at such meetings. In reversing the District Court's entry of
judgment for petitioners, the Court of Appeals held that the Act
applied to forbid discrimination against respondents' proposed club
on the basis of its religious content, and that the Act did not
violate the Establishment Clause.
Held: The judgment is affirmed.
867 F.2d 1076 (CA8 1989), affirmed.
Justice O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court with respect
to Parts I, II-A, II-B, and II-C, concluding that petitioners
violated the Equal Access Act by denying official recognition to
respondents' proposed club. Pp.
496 U. S.
234-247.
(a) The Act provides, among other things, that a "limited open
forum" exists whenever a covered school "grants an offering to or
opportunity for one or more noncurriculum related student groups to
meet on school premises." Its equal access obligation is therefore
triggered even if
Page 496 U. S. 227
such a school allows only one "noncurriculum related" group to
meet. Pp.
496 U. S.
234-237.
(b) Although the Act does not define the crucial phrase
"noncurriculum related student group," that term is best
interpreted in the light of the Act's language, logic, and
nondiscriminatory purpose, and Congress' intent to provide a low
threshold for triggering the Act's requirements, to mean any
student group that does not directly relate to the body of courses
offered by the school. A group directly relates to a school's
curriculum if the group's subject matter is actually taught, or
will soon be taught, in a regularly offered course; if that subject
matter concerns the body of courses as a whole; or if participation
in the group is required for a particular course or results in
academic credit. Whether a specific group is "noncurriculum
related" will therefore depend on the particular school's
curriculum, a determination that would be subject to factual
findings well within the competence of trial courts to make. Pp.
496 U. S.
237-243.
(c) Westside's existing student clubs include one or more
"noncurriculum related student group[s]" under the foregoing
standard. For example, Subsurfers, a club for students interested
in scuba diving, is such a group, since its subject matter is not
taught in any regularly offered course; it does not directly relate
to the curriculum as a whole in the same way that a student
government or similar group might; and participation in it is not
required by any course and does not result in extra academic
credit. Thus, the school has maintained a "limited open forum"
under the Act and is prohibited from discriminating, based on the
content of the students' speech, against students who wish to meet
on school premises during noninstructional time. Pp.
496 U. S.
243-247.
(d) Westside's denial of respondents' request to form a
religious group constitutes a denial of "equal access" to the
school's limited open forum. Although the school apparently permits
respondents to meet informally after school, they seek equal access
in the form of official recognition, which allows clubs to be part
of the student activities program and carries with it access to the
school newspaper, bulletin boards, public address system, and
annual Club Fair. Since denial of such recognition is based on the
religious content of the meetings respondents wish to conduct
within the school's limited open forum, it violates the Act. Pp.
496 U. S.
247-253.
Page 496 U. S. 228
Justice O'CONNOR, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, Justice WHITE,
and Justice BLACKMUN, concluded in Part III that the Equal Access
Act does not, on its face and as applied to Westside, contravene
the Establishment Clause. The logic of
Widmar v. Vincent,
454 U. S. 263,
454 U. S.
271-275 -- which applied the three-part test of
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602,
403 U. S.
612-613, to hold that an "equal access" policy, at the
state university level, does not violate the Clause -- applies with
equal force to the Act.
(a) Because the Act on its face grants equal access to both
secular and religious speech, it meets the secular purpose prong of
the test. Pp.
496 U. S.
248-249.
(b) The Act does not have the primary effect of advancing
religion. There is a crucial difference between government and
private speech endorsing religion, and, as Congress recognized in
passing the Act, high school students are mature enough and are
likely to understand that a school does not endorse or support
student speech that it merely permits on a nondiscriminatory basis.
Moreover, the Act expressly limits participation by school
officials at student religious group meetings and requires that
such meetings be held during "noninstructional time," and thereby
avoids the problems of the students' emulation of teachers as role
models and mandatory attendance requirements that might otherwise
indicate official endorsement or coercion. Although the possibility
of student peer pressure remains, there is little if any risk of
government endorsement or coercion where no formal classroom
activities are involved and no school officials actively
participate. Pp.
496 U. S.
249-252.
(c) Westside does not risk excessive entanglement between
government and religion by complying with the Act, since the Act's
provisions prohibit faculty monitors from participating in,
nonschool persons from directing, controlling, or regularly
attending, and school "sponsorship" of, religious meetings. Indeed,
a denial of equal access might well create greater entanglement
problems in the form of invasive monitoring to prevent religious
speech at meetings at which it might occur. Pp.
496 U. S.
252-253.
Justice KENNEDY, joined by Justice SCALIA, agreeing that the Act
does not violate the Establishment Clause, concluded that, since
the accommodation of religion mandated by the Act is a neutral one,
in the context of this case it suffices to inquire whether the Act
violates either of two principles. First, the government cannot
give direct benefits to religion in such a degree that it in fact
establishes a state religion or religious faith, or tends to do so.
County of Allegheny v. American Civil Liberties Union, Greater
Pittsburgh Chapter, 492 U. S. 573,
492 U. S. 655
(KENNEDY, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in
part). Any incidental benefits that accompany official recognition
of a religious club under the Act's criteria do not lead to the
establishment of religion under this standard.
See Widmar v.
Vincent, 454 U. S. 263.
Second, the government cannot coerce any student to participate in
a religious activity.
Cf. County of Allegheny, supra, 492
U.S. at
492 U. S. 659.
The Act also satisfies this standard, since nothing on its face or
in the facts of this case demonstrates that its enforcement will
pressure students to participate in such an activity. Pp.
496 U. S.
258-258,
496 U. S.
260-262.
Justice MARSHALL, joined by Justice BRENNAN, although agreeing
that the Act as applied to Westside could withstand
Establishment
Page 496 U. S. 229
Clause scrutiny, concluded that the inclusion of the Christian
Club in the type of forum presently established at the school,
without more, will not assure government neutrality toward
religion. Pp.
496 U. S.
263-270.
(a) The introduction of religious speech into the public schools
reveals the tension between the Free Speech and Establishment
Clauses, because the failure of a school to stand apart from
religious speech can convey a message that the school endorses
rather than merely tolerates that speech. Thus, the particular
vigilance this Court has shown in monitoring compliance with the
Establishment Clause in elementary and secondary schools,
see,
e.g., Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U. S. 578,
482 U. S.
583-584, must extend to monitoring of the actual effects
of an "equal access" policy. Pp.
496 U. S.
263-264.
(b) The plurality misplaces its reliance on
Widmar v.
Vincent, 454 U. S. 263 in
light of the substantially different character of the student forum
at issue here. In
Widmar, the state university maintained
a wide-open and independent forum, affording many ideological
organizations access to school facilities; took concrete steps to
assure that the university's name was not identified with the
policies or programs of any student group; and emphasized the
autonomy of its students. Here, in contrast, Westside currently
does not recognize any student group that advocates a controversial
viewpoint and explicitly promotes its student clubs as a vital part
of its total educational program and as a means of developing
citizenship, shaping character, and inculcating fundamental values.
Moreover, the absence of other advocacy-oriented clubs in the
highly controlled environment provides a fertile ground for peer
pressure. In these circumstances, Westside's failure to
disassociate itself from the activities and goals of the Christian
Club poses a real danger that it will be viewed by students as
endorsing religious activity. Pp.
496 U. S.
264-269.
(c) Thus, Westside must take steps to fully disassociate itself
from the Christian Club's religious speech and avoid appearing to
sponsor or endorse the Club's goals. It could, for example,
entirely discontinue encouraging student participation in clubs,
and clarify that the clubs are not instrumentally related to the
school's overall mission. Or, if Westside sought to continue its
general endorsement of those clubs that did not engage in
controversial speech, it could do so if it also affirmatively
disclaimed endorsement of the Christian Club. Pp.
496 U. S.
269-270.
O'CONNOR, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered
the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II-A II-B, and
II-C, in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, BLACKMUN, SCALIA, and
KENNEDY, JJ., joined, and an opinion with respect to Part III, in
which REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE AND BLACKMUN, JJ., joined.
KENNEDY, J., filed an opinion
Page 496 U. S. 230
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which
SCALIA, J., joined,
post, p.
496 U. S. 258.
MARSHALL, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
BRENNAN, J., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
496 U. S.
270.
Page 496 U. S. 231
OPINION
Justice O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court, except as
to Part III.
This case requires us to decide whether the Equal Access Act, 98
Stat. 1302, 20 U.S.C. §§ 4071-4074, prohibits Westside High School
from denying a student religious group permission to meet on school
premises during noninstructional time, and if so, whether the Act,
so construed, violates the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment.
I
Respondents are current and former students at Westside High
School, a public secondary school in Omaha, Nebraska. At the time
this suit was filed, the school enrolled about 1,450 students and
included grades 10 to 12; in the 1987-1988 school year, ninth
graders were added. Westside High School is part of the Westside
Community School system, an independent public school district.
Petitioners are the Board of Education of Westside Community
Schools (District 66); Wayne W. Meier, the president of the school
board; James E. Findley, the principal of Westside High School;
Kenneth K. Hanson, the superintendent of schools for the school
district; and James A. Tangdell, the assistant superintendent of
schools for the school district.
Students at Westside High School are permitted to join various
student groups and clubs, all of which meet after school hours on
school premises. The students may choose from approximately 30
recognized groups on a voluntary basis. A list of student groups,
together with a brief description of each provided by the school,
appears in the Appendix to this opinion.
School Board Policy 5610 concerning "Student Clubs and
Organizations" recognizes these student clubs as a "vital part of
the total education program as a means of developing citizenship,
wholesome attitudes, good human relations, knowledge and skills."
App. 488. Board Policy 5610 also provides that each club shall have
faculty sponsorship and that
Page 496 U. S. 232
"clubs and organizations shall not be sponsored by any political
or religious organization, or by any organization which denies
membership on the basis of race, color, creed, sex or political
belief."
Ibid. Board Policy 6180, on "Recognition of Religious
Beliefs and Customs" requires that "[s]tudents adhering to a
specific set of religious beliefs or holding to little or no belief
shall be alike respected."
Id. at 462. In addition, Board
Policy 5450 recognizes its students' "Freedom of Expression,"
consistent with the authority of the Board.
Id. at
489.
There is no written school board policy concerning the formation
of student clubs. Rather, students wishing to form a club present
their request to a school official, who determines whether the
proposed club's goals and objectives are consistent with school
board policies and with the school district's "Mission and Goals"
-- a broadly worded "blueprint" that expresses the district's
commitment to teaching academic, physical, civic, and personal
skills and values.
Id. at 473-478.
In January, 1985, respondent Bridget Mergens met with Westside's
principal, Dr. Findley, and requested permission to form a
Christian club at the school. The proposed club would have the same
privileges and meet on the same terms and conditions as other
Westside student groups, except that the proposed club would not
have a faculty sponsor. According to the students' testimony at
trial, the club's purpose would have been, among other things, to
permit the students to read and discuss the Bible, to have
fellowship, and to pray together. Membership would have been
voluntary and open to all students, regardless of religious
affiliation.
Findley denied the request, as did associate superintendent
Tangdell. In February, 1985, Findley and Tangdell informed Mergens
that they had discussed the matter with superintendent Hanson and
that he had agreed that her request should be denied. The school
officials explained that school policy required all student clubs
to have a faculty sponsor,
Page 496 U. S. 233
which the proposed religious club would not or could not have,
and that a religious club at the school would violate the
Establishment Clause. In March, 1985, Mergens appealed the denial
of her request to the Board of Education, but the Board voted to
uphold the denial.
Respondents, by and through their parents as next friends, then
brought this suit in the United States District Court for the
District of Nebraska, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.
They alleged that petitioners' refusal to permit the proposed club
to meet at Westside violated the Equal Access Act, 20 U.S.C. §§
4071-4074, which prohibits public secondary schools that receive
federal financial assistance and that maintain a "limited open
forum" from denying "equal access" to students who wish to meet
within the forum on the basis of the content of the speech at such
meetings, § 4071(a). Respondents further alleged that petitioners'
actions denied them their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights to
freedom of speech, association, and the free exercise of religion.
Petitioners responded that the Equal Access Act did not apply to
Westside, and that, if the Act did apply, it violated the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, and was therefore
unconstitutional. The United States intervened in the action
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2403 to defend the constitutionality of the
Act.
The District Court entered judgment for petitioners. The court
held that the Act did not apply in this case because Westside did
not have a "limited open forum" as defined by the Act -- all of
Westside's student clubs, the court concluded, were
curriculum-related and tied to the educational function of the
school. The court rejected respondents' constitutional claims,
reasoning that Westside did not have a limited public forum as set
forth in
Widmar v. Vincent, 454 U.
S. 263 (1981), and that Westside's denial of
respondents' request was reasonably related to legitimate
pedagogical concerns,
see Hazelwood School Dist. v.
Kuhlmeier, 484 U. S. 260,
484 U. S. 273
(1988).
Page 496 U. S. 234
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
reversed. 867 F.2d 1076 (1989). The Court of Appeals held that the
District Court erred in concluding that all the existing student
clubs at Westside were curriculum-related. The Court of Appeals
noted that the "broad interpretation" advanced by the Westside
school officials "would make the [Equal Access Act] meaningless"
and would allow any school to "arbitrarily deny access to school
facilities to any unfavored student club on the basis of its speech
content," which was "exactly the result that Congress sought to
prohibit by enacting the [Act]."
Id. at 1078. The Court of
Appeals instead found that "[m]any of the student clubs at WHS,
including the chess club, are noncurriculum-related."
Id.
at 1079. Accordingly, because it found that Westside maintained a
limited open forum under the Act, the Court of Appeals concluded
that the Act applied to "forbi[d] discrimination against
[respondents'] proposed club on the basis of its religious
content."
Ibid.
The Court of Appeals then rejected petitioners' contention that
the Act violated the Establishment Clause. Noting that the Act
extended the decision in
Widmar v. Vincent, supra, to
public secondary schools, the Court of Appeals concluded that
"[a]ny constitutional attack on the [Act] must therefore be
predicated on the difference between secondary school students and
university students." 867 F.2d at 1080 (footnote omitted). Because
"Congress considered the difference in the maturity level of
secondary students and university students before passing the
[Act]," the Court of Appeals held, on the basis of Congress'
factfinding, that the Act did not violate the Establishment Clause.
Ibid.
We granted certiorari, 492 U.S. 917 (1989), and now affirm.
II
A
In
Widmar v. Vincent, 454 U. S. 263
(1981), we invalidated, on free speech grounds, a state university
regulation that prohibited
Page 496 U. S. 235
student use of school facilities "
for purposes of religious
worship or religious teaching.'" Id. at 454 U. S. 265.
In doing so, we held that an "equal access" policy would not
violate the Establishment Clause under our decision in Lemon v.
Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602,
403 U. S.
612-613 (1971). In particular, we held that such a
policy would have a secular purpose, would not have the primary
effect of advancing religion, and would not result in excessive
entanglement between government and religion. Widmar, 454
U.S. at 454 U. S.
271-274. We noted, however, that
"[u]niversity students are, of course, young adults. They are
less impressionable than younger students, and should be able to
appreciate that the University's policy is one of neutrality toward
religion."
Id. at
454 U. S. 274,
n. 14.
In 1984, Congress extended the reasoning of
Widmar to
public secondary schools. Under the Equal Access Act, a public
secondary school with a "limited open forum" is prohibited from
discriminating against students who wish to conduct a meeting
within that forum on the basis of the "religious, political,
philosophical, or other content of the speech at such meetings." 20
U.S.C. §§ 4071(a) and (b). Specifically, the Act provides:
"It shall be unlawful for any public secondary school which
receives Federal financial assistance and which has a limited open
forum to deny equal access or a fair opportunity to, or
discriminate against, any students who wish to conduct a meeting
within that limited open forum on the basis of the religious,
political, philosophical, or other content of the speech at such
meetings."
20 U.S.C. § 4071(a). A "limited open forum" exists whenever a
public secondary school
"grants an offering to or opportunity for one or more
noncurriculum related student groups to meet on school premises
during noninstructional time."
§ 4071(b). "Meeting" is defined to include "those activities of
student groups which are permitted under a school's limited open
forum and are not directly related to the school curriculum." §
4072(3).
Page 496 U. S. 236
"Noninstructional time" is defined to mean "time set aside by
the school before actual classroom instruction begins or after
actual classroom instruction ends." § 4072(4). Thus, even if a
public secondary school allows only one "noncurriculum related
student group" to meet, the Act's obligations are triggered and the
school may not deny other clubs, on the basis of the content of
their speech, equal access to meet on school premises during
noninstructional time.
The Act further specifies that "[s]chools shall be deemed to
offer a fair opportunity to students who wish to conduct a meeting
within its limited open forum" if the school uniformly provides
that the meetings are voluntary and student-initiated; are not
sponsored by the school, the government, or its agents or
employees; do not materially and substantially interfere with the
orderly conduct of educational activities within the school; and
are not directed, controlled, conducted, or regularly attended by
"nonschool persons." §§ 4071(c)(1), (2), (4), and (5).
"Sponsorship" is defined to mean
"the act of promoting, leading, or participating in a meeting.
The assignment of a.teacher, administrator, or other school
employee to a meeting for custodial purposes does not constitute
sponsorship of the meeting."
§ 4072(2). If the meetings are religious, employees or agents of
the school or government may attend only in a "nonparticipatory
capacity." § 4071(c)(3). Moreover, a State may not influence the
form of any religious activity, require any person to participate
in such activity, or compel any school agent or employee to attend
a meeting if the content of the speech at the meeting is contrary
to that person's beliefs. §§ 4071(d)(1), (2), and (3).
Finally, the Act does not "authorize the United States to deny
or withhold Federal financial assistance to any school," § 4071(e),
or
"limit the authority of the school, its agents or employees, to
maintain order and discipline on school premises, to protect the
wellbeing of students and faculty, and to
Page 496 U. S. 237
assure that attendance of students at the meetings is
voluntary."
§ 4071(f).
B
The parties agree that Westside High School receives federal
financial assistance and is a public secondary school within the
meaning of the Act. App. 57-58. The Act's obligation to grant equal
access to student groups is therefore triggered if Westside
maintains a "limited open forum" --
i.e., if it permits
one or more "noncurriculum related student groups" to meet on
campus before or after classes.
Unfortunately, the Act does not define the crucial phrase
"noncurriculum related student group." Our immediate task is
therefore one of statutory interpretation. We begin, of course,
with the language of the statute.
See, e.g., Mallard v. U.S.
District Court, 490 U. S. 294,
490 U. S. 300;
United States v. James, 478 U. S. 597,
478 U. S. 604
(1986). The common meaning of the term "curriculum" is "the whole
body of courses offered by an educational institution or one of its
branches." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 557 (1976);
see also Black's Law Dictionary 345 (5th ed. 1979) ("The
set of studies or courses for a particular period, designated by a
school or branch of a school").
Cf. Hazelwood School Dist. v.
Kuhlmeier, 484 U.S. at
484 U. S. 271
(high school newspaper produced as part of the school's journalism
class was part of the curriclum). Any sensible interpretation of
"noncurriculum related student group" must therefore be anchored in
the notion that such student groups are those that are not related
to the body of courses offered by the school. The difficult
question is the degree of "unrelatedness to the curriculum"
required for a group to be considered "noncurriculum related."
The Act's definition of the sort of "meeting[s]" that must be
accommodated under the statute, § 4071(a), sheds some light on this
question. "[T]he term
meeting' includes those activities of
student groups which are . . . not directly related to the
school curriculum." § 4072(3) (emphasis added). Congress'
Page 496 U. S. 238
use of the phrase "directly related" implies that student groups
directly related to the subject matter of courses offered by the
school do not fall within the "noncurriculum related" category, and
would therefore be considered "curriculum related."
The logic of the Act also supports this view, namely, that a
curriculum-related student group is one that has more than just a
tangential or attenuated relationship to courses offered by the
school. Because the purpose of granting equal access is to prohibit
discrimination between religious or political clubs on the one hand
and other noncurriculum-related student groups on the other, the
Act is premised on the notion that a religious or political club is
itself likely to be a noncurriculum-related student group. It
follows, then, that a student group that is "curriculum related"
must at least have a more direct relationship to the curriculum
than a religious or political club would have.
Although the phrase "noncurriculum related student group"
nevertheless remains sufficiently ambiguous that we might normally
resort to legislative history,
see, e.g., James, supra,
478 U.S. at
478 U. S. 606,
we find the legislative history on this issue less than helpful.
Because the bill that led to the Act was extensively rewritten in a
series of multilateral negotiations after it was passed by the
House and reported out of committee by the Senate, the committee
reports shed no light on the language actually adopted. During
congressional debate on the subject, legislators referred to a
number of different definitions, and thus both petitioners and
respondents can cite to legislative history favoring their
interpretation of the phrase.
Compare 130 Cong.Rec. 19223
(1984) (statement of Sen. Hatfield) (curriculum-related clubs are
those that are "really a kind of extension of the classroom"), with
ibid. (statement of Sen. Hatfield) (in response to
question whether school districts would have full authority to
decide what was curriculum-related, "[w]e in no way seek to limit
that discretion").
See Laycock, Equal Access and Moments
of Silence: The Equal
Page 496 U. S. 239
Status of Religious Speech by Private Speakers, 81 Nw.U.L.Rev.
1, 37-39 (1986).
We think it significant, however, that the Act, which was passed
by wide, bipartisan majorities in both the House and the Senate,
reflects at least some consensus on a broad legislative purpose.
The committee reports indicate that the Act was intended to address
perceived widespread discrimination against religious speech in
public schools,
see H.R.Rep. No. 98-710, p. 4 (1984);
S.Rep. No. 98-357, pp. 10-11 (1984), and, as the language of the
Act indicates, its sponsors contemplated that the Act would do more
than merely validate the
status quo. The committee reports
also show that the Act was enacted in part in response to two
federal appellate court decisions holding that student religious
groups could not, consistent with the Establishment Clause, meet on
school premises during noninstructional time.
See H.R.
Rep. No. 98-710,
supra, at 3-6 (discussing
Lubbock
Civil Liberties Union v. Lubbock Independent School Dist., 669
F.2d 1038, 1042-1048 (CA5 1982),
cert. denied, 459 U.S.
1155-1156 (1983), and
Brandon v. Guilderland Bd. of Ed.,
635 F.2d 971 (CA2 1980),
cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1123
(1981)); S.Rep. No. 98-357,
supra, at 6-9, 11-14 (same). A
broad reading of the Act would be consistent with the views of
those who sought to end discrimination by allowing students to meet
and discuss religion before and after classes.
In light of this legislative purpose, we think that the term
"noncurriculum related student group" is best interpreted broadly
to mean any student group that does not directly relate to the body
of courses offered by the school. In our view, a student group
directly relates to a school's curriculum if the subject matter of
the group is actually taught, or will soon be taught, in a
regularly offered course; if the subject matter of the group
concerns the body of courses as a whole; if participation in the
group is required for a particular course; or if participation in
the group results in academic
Page 496 U. S. 240
credit. We think this limited definition of groups that directly
relate to the curriculum is a common sense interpretation of the
Act that is consistent with Congress' intent to provide a low
threshold for triggering the Act's requirements.
For example, a French club would directly relate to the
curriculum if a school taught French in a regularly offered course
or planned to teach the subject in the near future. A school's
student government would generally relate directly to the
curriculum to the extent that it addresses concerns, solicits
opinions, and formulates proposals pertaining to the body of
courses offered by the school. If participation in a school's band
or orchestra were required for the band or orchestra classes, or
resulted in academic credit, then those groups would also directly
relate to the curriculum. The existence of such groups at a school
would not trigger the Act's obligations.
On the other hand, unless a school could show that groups such
as a chess club, a stamp collecting club, or a community service
club fell within our description of groups that directly relate to
the curriculum, such groups would be "noncurriculum related student
groups" for purposes of the Act. The existence of such groups would
create a "limited open forum" under the Act and would prohibit the
school from denying equal access to any other student group on the
basis of the content of that group's speech. Whether a specific
student group is a "noncurriculum related student group" will
therefore depend on a particular school's curriculum, but such
determinations would be subject to factual findings well within the
competence of trial courts to make.
Petitioners contend that our reading of the Act unduly hinders
local control over schools and school activities, but we think that
schools and school districts nevertheless retain a significant
measure of authority over the type of officially recognized
activities in which their students participate.
See, e.g.,
Hazelwood School Dist. v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.
S. 260 (1988);
Bethel School Dist. No. 403
v. Fraser, 478 U.S.
Page 496 U. S. 241
675 (1986). First, schools and school districts maintain their
traditional latitude to determine appropriate subjects of
instruction. To the extent that a school chooses to structure its
course offerings and existing student groups to avoid the Act's
obligations, that result is not prohibited by the Act. On matters
of statutory interpretation, "[o]ur task is to apply the text, not
to improve on it."
Pavelic & LeFlore v. Marvel
Entertainment Group, 493 U. S. 120,
493 U. S. 126
(1989) (slip op., at 6). Second, the Act expressly does not limit a
school's authority to prohibit meetings that would "materially and
substantially interfere with the orderly conduct of educational
activities within the school." § 4071(c)(4);
cf. Tinker v. Des
Moines Independent Community School Dist., 393 U.
S. 503,
393 U. S. 509
(1969). The Act also preserves
"the authority of the school, its agents or employees, to
maintain order and discipline on school premises, to protect the
wellbeing of students and faculty, and to assure that attendance of
students, at meetings is voluntary."
§ 4071(f). Finally, because the Act applies only to public
secondary schools that receive federal financial assistance, §
4071(a), a school district seeking to escape the statute's
obligations could simply forgo federal funding. Although we do not
doubt that in some cases this may be an unrealistic option,
Congress clearly sought to prohibit schools from discriminating on
the basis of the content of a student group's speech, and that
obligation is the price a federally funded school must pay if it
opens its facilities to noncurriculum-related student groups.
The dissent suggests that
"an extracurricular student organization is 'noncurriculum
related' if it has as its purpose (or as part of its purpose) the
advocacy of partisan theological, political, or ethical views."
Post at
496 U. S. 276;
see also id. at
496 U. S. 271,
496 U. S. 290
(Act is triggered only if school permits "controversial" or
"distasteful" groups to use its facilities);
post at
496 U. S. 291
("noncurriculum" subjects are those that "
cannot properly be
included in a public school curriculum'"). This interpretation of
the Act, we are told, is mandated by Congress' intention
to
Page 496 U. S.
242
"track our own Free Speech Clause jurisprudence,"
post at 496 U. S. 279,
n. 10, by incorporating Widmar's notion of a "limited
public forum" into the language of the Act. Post at
496 U. S.
271-272.
This suggestion is flawed for at least two reasons. First, the
Act itself neither uses the phrase "limited public forum" nor so
much as hints that that doctrine is somehow "incorporated" into the
words of the statute. The operative language of the statute, 20
U.S.C. § 4071(a), of course, refers to a "limited open forum," a
term that is specifically defined in the next subsection, §
4071(b). Congress was presumably aware that "limited public forum,"
as used by the Court, is a term of art, see,
e.g., Perry Ed.
Assn. v. Perry Local Educators' Assn., 460 U. S.
37,
460 U. S. 45-49
(1983), and had it intended to import that concept into the Act,
one would suppose that it would have done so explicitly. Indeed,
Congress' deliberate choice to use a different term -- and to
define that term -- can only mean that it intended to establish a
standard different from the one established by our free speech
cases.
See Laycock, 81 Nw.U.L. Rev. at 36 ("The statutory
limited open forum' is an artificial construct, and comparisons
with the constitutional [`limited public forum'] cases can be
misleading"). To paraphrase the dissent, "[i]f Congress really
intended to [incorporate] Widmar for reasons of
administrative clarity, Congress kept its intent well hidden, both
in the statute and in the debates preceding its passage."
Post at 496 U. S.
281-282, n. 15.
Second, and more significant, the dissent's reliance on the
legislative history to support its interpretation of the Act shows
just how treacherous that task can be. The dissent appears to agree
with our view that the legislative history of the Act, even if
relevant, is highly unreliable,
see, e.g., post at
496 U. S.
274-275, n. 5, and
496 U. S.
281-282, n. 15, yet the interpretation it suggests rests
solely on a few passing, general references by legislators to our
decision in
Widmar, see post at
496 U. S. 274
and n. 4. We think that reliance on legislative history is
hazardous at best, but where "
not even the sponsors of the
bill
Page 496 U. S.
243
knew what it meant,'" post at 496 U. S. 281,
n. 15 (quoting Laycock, supra, at 38 (citation omitted)),
such reliance cannot form a reasonable basis on which to interpret
the text of a statute. For example, the dissent appears to place
great reliance on a comment by Senator Levin that the Act extends
the rule in Widmar to secondary schools, see post
at 496 U. S. 274,
n. 4, but Senator Levin's understanding of the "rule," expressed in
the same breath as the statement on which the dissent relies, fails
to support the dissent's reading of the Act. See 130
Cong.Rec. 19236 (1984) ("The pending amendment will allow students
equal access to secondary schools student-initiated religious
meetings before and after school where the school
generally allows groups of secondary school students to
meet during those times") (emphasis added). Moreover, a number of
Senators, during the same debate, warned that some of the views
stated did not reflect their own views. See, e.g., ibid.
("I am troubled with the legislative history that you are making
here") (statement of Sen. Chiles); id. at 19237 ("[T]here
have been a number of statements made on the floor today which may
be construed as legislative history modifying what my understanding
was or what anyone's understanding might be of this bill")
(statement of Sen. Denton). The only thing that can be said with
any confidence is that some Senators may have thought that the
obligations of the Act would be triggered only when a school
permits advocacy groups to meet on school premises during
noninstructional time. That conclusion, of course, cannot bear the
weight the dissent places on it.
C
The parties in this case focus their dispute on 10 of Westside's
approximately 30 voluntary student clubs: Interact (a service club
related to Rotary International); Chess; Subsurfers (a club for
students interested in scuba diving); National Honor Society;
Photography; Welcome to Westside (a club to introduce new students
to the
Page 496 U. S. 244
school); Future Business Leaders of America; Zonta (the female
counterpart to Interact); Student Advisory Board (student
government); and Student Forum (student government). App. 60.
Petitioners contend that all of these student activities are
curriculum-related because they further the goals of particular
aspects of the school's curriculum. Welcome to Westside, for
example, helps "further the School's overall goal of developing
effective citizens by requiring student members to contribute to
their fellow students." Brief for Petitioners 16. The student
government clubs "advance the goals of the School's political
science classes by providing an understanding and appreciation of
government processes."
Id. at 17. Subsurfers furthers "one
of the essential goals of the Physical Education Department --
enabling students to develop lifelong recreational interests."
Id. at 18. Chess "supplement[s] math and science courses
because it enhances students' ability to engage in critical thought
processes."
Id. at 18-19. Participation in Interact and
Zonta "promotes effective citizenship, a critical goal of the WHS
curriculum, specifically the Social Studies Department."
Id. at 19.
To the extent that petitioners contend that "curriculum related"
means anything remotely related to abstract educational goals,
however, we reject that argument. To define "curriculum related" in
a way that results in almost no schools having limited open fora,
or in a way that permits schools to evade the Act by strategically
describing existing student groups, would render the Act merely
hortatory.
See 130 Cong.Rec. 19222 (1984) (statement of
Sen. Leahy) ("[A] limited open forum should be triggered by what a
school does, not by what it says"). As the court below
explained:
"Allowing such a broad interpretation of 'curriculum-related'
would make the [Act] meaningless. A school's administration could
simply declare that it maintains a closed forum and choose which
student clubs it wanted to allow by tying the purposes of those
clubs to
Page 496 U. S. 245
some broadly defined educational goal. At the same time, the
administration could arbitrarily deny access to school facilities
to any unfavored student club on the basis of its speech content.
This is exactly the result that Congress sought to prohibit by
enacting the [Act]. A public secondary school cannot simply declare
that it maintains a closed forum and then discriminate against a
particular student group on the basis of the content of the speech
of that group."
867 F.2d 1076, 1078 (CA8 1989).
See also Garnett v. Renton
School Dist. No. 403, 874 F.2d 608, 614 (CA9 1989) ("Complete
deference [to the school district] would render the Act meaningless
because school boards could circumvent the Act's requirements
simply by asserting that all student groups are curriculum
related").
Rather, we think it clear that Westside's existing student
groups include one or more "noncurriculum related student groups."
Although Westside's physical education classes apparently include
swimming,
see Record, Tr. of Preliminary Injunction
Hearing 25, counsel stated at oral argument that scuba diving is
not taught in any regularly offered course at the school, Tr. of
Oral Arg. 6. Based on Westside's own description of the group,
Subsurfers does not directly relate to the curriculum as a whole in
the same way that a student government or similar group might. App.
485-486. Moreover, participation in Subsurfers is not required by
any course at the school, and does not result in extra academic
credit.
Id. at 170-171, 236. Thus, Subsurfers is a
"noncurriculum related student group" for purposes of the Act.
Similarly, although math teachers at Westside have encouraged their
students to play chess,
id., at 442-444, chess is not
taught in any regularly offered course at the school, Tr. of Oral
Arg. 6, and participation in the chess club is not required for any
class and does not result in extra credit for any class, App.
302-304. The chess club is therefore another "noncurriculum related
student group" at
Page 496 U. S. 246
Westside. Moreover, Westside's principal acknowledged at trial
that the Peer Advocates program -- a service group that works with
special education classes -- does not directly relate to any
courses offered by the school and is not required by any courses
offered by the school.
Id. at 231-233;
see also
id. at 198-199 (participation in Peer Advocates is not
required for any course and does not result in extra credit in any
course). Peer Advocates would therefore also fit within our
description of a "noncurriculum related student group." The record
therefore supports a finding that Westside has maintained a limited
open forum under the Act.
Although our definition of "noncurriculum related student
activities" looks to a school's actual practice, rather than its
stated policy, we note that our conclusion is also supported by the
school's own description of its student activities. As reprinted in
the Appendix to this opinion, the school states that Band "is
included in our regular curriculum"; Choir "is a course offered as
part of the curriculum"; Distributive Education "is an extension of
the Distributive Education class"; International Club is "developed
through our foreign language classes"; Latin Club is "designed for
those students who are taking Latin as a foreign language"; Student
Publications "includes classes offered in preparation of the
yearbook (Shield) and the student newspaper (Lance)"; Dramatics "is
an extension of a regular academic class"; and Orchestra "is an
extension of our regular curriculum." These descriptions constitute
persuasive evidence that these student clubs directly relate to the
curriculum. By inference, however, the fact that the descriptions
of student activities such as Subsurfers and chess do not include
such references strongly suggests that those clubs do not, by the
school's own admission, directly relate to the curriculum. We
therefore conclude that Westside permits "one or more noncurriculum
related student groups to meet on school premises during
noninstructional time," § 4071(b). Because Westside maintains a
"limited open forum" under the Act, it is prohibited from
Page 496 U. S. 247
discriminating, based on the content of the students' speech,
against students who wish to meet on school premises during
noninstructional time.
The remaining statutory question is whether petitioners' denial
of respondents' request to form a religious group constitutes a
denial of "equal access" to the school's limited open forum.
Although the school apparently permits respondents to meet
informally after school, App. 315-316, respondents seek equal
access in the form of official recognition by the school. Official
recognition allows student clubs to be part of the student
activities program, and carries with it access to the school
newspaper, bulletin boards, the public address system, and the
annual Club Fair.
Id. at 434-435. Given that the Act
explicitly prohibits denial of "equal access . . . to . . . any
students who wish to conduct a meeting within [the school's]
limited open forum" on the basis of the religious content of the
speech at such meetings, § 4071(a), we hold that Westside's denial
of respondents' request to form a Christian club denies them "equal
access" under the Act.
Because we rest our conclusion on statutory grounds, we need not
decide -- and therefore express no opinion on -- whether the First
Amendment requires the same result.
III
Petitioners contend that, even if Westside has created a limited
open forum within the meaning of the Act, its denial of official
recognition to the proposed Christian club must nevertheless stand
because the Act violates the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment, as applied to the States through the Fourteenth
Amendment. Specifically, petitioners maintain that, because the
school's recognized student activities are an integral part of its
educational mission, official recognition of respondents' proposed
club would effectively incorporate religious activities into the
school's official program, endorse participation in the religious
club, and provide
Page 496 U. S. 248
the club with an official platform to proselytize other
students.
We disagree. In
Widmar, we applied the three-part
Lemon test to hold that an "equal access" policy, at the
university level, does not violate the Establishment Clause.
See 454 U.S. at
454 U. S.
271-275 (applying
Lemon, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
612-613). We concluded that "an open-forum policy,
including nondiscrimination against religious speech, would have a
secular purpose," 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 271
(footnotes omitted), and would in fact avoid entanglement with
religion.
See id. at
454 U. S. 272,
n. 11 ("[T]he University would risk greater
entanglement' by
attempting to enforce its exclusion of `religious worship' and
`religious speech'"). We also found that, although incidental
benefits accrued to religious groups who used university
facilities, this result did not amount to an establishment of
religion. First, we stated that a university's forum does not
"confer any imprimatur of state approval on religious sects or
practices." Id. at 454 U. S. 274.
Indeed, the message is one of neutrality rather than endorsement;
if a State refused to let religious groups use facilities open to
others, then it would demonstrate not neutrality but hostility
toward religion.
"The Establishment Clause does not license government to treat
religion and those who teach or practice it, simply by virtue of
their status as such, as subversive of American ideals and
therefore subject to unique disabilities."
McDaniel v. Paty, 435 U. S. 618,
435 U. S. 641
(1978) (BRENNAN, J., concurring in judgment). Second, we noted that
"[t]he [University's] provision of benefits to [a] broad . . .
spectrum of groups" -- both nonreligious and religious speakers --
was "an important index of secular effect." 454 U.S. at
454 U. S.
274.
We think the logic of
Widmar applies with equal force
to the Equal Access Act. As an initial matter, the Act's
prohibition of discrimination on the basis of "political,
philosophical, or other" speech as well as religious speech is a
sufficient basis for meeting the secular purpose prong of the
Lemon test.
See Edwards v. Aguillard,
482 U. S. 578,
482 U. S. 586
(1987)
Page 496 U. S. 249
(Court "is normally deferential to a [legislative] articulation
of a secular purpose");
Mueller v. Allen, 463 U.
S. 388,
463 U. S.
394-395 (1983) (Court is "reluctan[t] to attribute
unconstitutional motives to the States, particularly when a
plausible secular purpose for the State's program may be discerned
from the face of the statute"). Congress' avowed purpose -- to
prevent discrimination against religious and other types of speech
-- is undeniably secular.
See Corporation of Presiding Bishop,
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints v. Amos, 483 U.S.
327,
483 U. S.
335-336 (1987);
Committee for Public Education and
Religious Liberty v. Nyquist, 413 U.
S. 756,
413 U. S. 773
(1973).
Cf. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a) (prohibiting employment
discrimination on grounds of race, color, religion sex, or national
origin). Even if some legislators were motivated by a conviction
that religious speech in particular was valuable and worthy of
protection, that alone would not invalidate the Act, because what
is relevant is the legislative purpose of the statute, not the
possibly religious motives of the legislators who enacted the law.
Because the Act on its face grants equal access to both secular and
religious speech, we think it clear that the Act's purpose was not
to "
endorse or disapprove of religion,'" Wallace v.
Jaffree, 472 U. S. 38,
472 U. S. 56
(1985) (quoting Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.
S. 668, 465 U. S. 690
(1984) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring)).
Petitioners' principal contention is that the Act has the
primary effect of advancing religion. Specifically, petitioners
urge that, because the student religious meetings are held under
school aegis, and because the state's compulsory attendance laws
bring the students together (and thereby provide a ready-made
audience for student evangelists), an objective observer in the
position of a secondary school student will perceive official
school support for such religious meetings.
See County of
Allegheny v. ACLU, 492 U. S. 573,
492 U. S. 593
(1989) (Establishment Clause inquiry is whether the government
"
convey[s] or attempt[s] to convey a message that religion
or
Page 496 U. S.
250
a particular religious belief is favored or preferred'")
(quoting Wallace v. Jaffree, supra, 472 U.S. at
472 U. S. 70
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in
judgment)).
We disagree. First, although we have invalidated the use of
public funds to pay for teaching state-required subjects at
parochial schools, in part because of the risk of creating
"a crucial symbolic link between government and religion,
thereby enlisting -- at least in the eyes of impressionable
youngsters -- the powers of government to the support of the
religious denomination operating the school,"
Grand Rapids School Dist. v. Ball, 473 U.
S. 373,
473 U. S. 385
(1985), there is a crucial difference between government speech
endorsing religion, which the Establishment Clause forbids, and
private speech endorsing religion, which the Free Speech and Free
Exercise Clauses protect. We think that secondary school students
are mature enough and are likely to understand that a school does
not endorse or support student speech that it merely permits on a
nondiscriminatory basis.
Cf. Tinker v. Des Moines Independent
Community School Dist., 393 U. S. 503
(1969) (no danger that high school students' symbolic speech
implied school endorsement);
West Virginia State Bd. of Ed. v.
Barnette, 319 U. S. 624
(1943) (same).
See generally Note, 92 Yale L.J. 499,
507-509 (1983) (summarizing research in adolescent psychology). The
proposition that schools do not endorse everything they fail to
censor is not complicated.
"[P]articularly in this age of massive media information . . .
the few years difference in age between high school and college
students [does not] justif[y] departing from
Widmar."
Bender v. Williamsport Area School Dist., 475 U.
S. 534,
475 U. S. 556
(1986) (Powell, J., dissenting).
Indeed, we note that Congress specifically rejected the argument
that high school students are likely to confuse an equal access
policy with state sponsorship of religion.
See S.Rep. No.
98-357, p. 8 (1984);
id. at 35 ("[S]tudents below the
college level are capable of distinguishing between
State-initiated, school sponsored, or teacher-led religious
Page 496 U. S. 251
speech on the one hand and student-initiated, student-led
religious speech on the other"). Given the deference due "the duly
enacted and carefully considered decision of a coequal and
representative branch of our Government,"
Walters v. National
Assn. of Radiation Survivors, 473 U.
S. 305,
473 U. S. 319
(1985);
see also Rostker v. Goldberg, 453 U. S.
57,
453 U. S. 64
(1981), we do not lightly second-guess such legislative judgments,
particularly where the judgments are based in part on empirical
determinations.
Second, we note that the Act expressly limits participation by
school officials at meetings of student religious groups, §§
4071(c)(2) and (3), and that any such meetings must be held during
"noninstructional time," § 4071(b). The Act therefore avoids the
problems of "the students' emulation of teachers as role models"
and "mandatory attendance requirements,"
Edwards v.
Aguillard, 482 U.S. at
482 U. S. 584;
see also Illinois ex rel. McCollum v. Board of Education,
333 U. S. 203,
333 U. S.
209-210 (1948) (release time program invalid where
students were "released in part from their legal duty [to attend
school] upon the condition that they attend the religious
classes"). To be sure, the possibility of student peer pressure
remains, but there is little if any risk of official state
endorsement or coercion where no formal classroom activities are
involved and no school officials actively participate. Moreover,
petitioners' fear of a mistaken inference of endorsement is largely
self-imposed, because the school itself has control over any
impressions it gives its students. To the extent a school makes
clear that its recognition of respondents' proposed club is not an
endorsement of the views of the club's participants,
see
Widmar, 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 274,
n. 14 (noting that university student handbook states that the
university's name will not be identified with the aims, policies,
or opinions of any student organization or its members), students
will reasonably understand that the school's official recognition
of the club evinces neutrality toward, rather than endorsement of,
religious speech.
Page 496 U. S. 252
Third, the broad spectrum of officially recognized student clubs
at Westside, and the fact that Westside students are free to
initiate and organize additional student clubs,
see App.
221-222, counteract any possible message of official endorsement of
or preference for religion or a particular religious belief.
See Widmar, 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 274
("The provision of benefits to so broad a spectrum of groups is an
important index of secular effect"). Although a school may not
itself lead or direct a religious club, a school that permits a
student-initiated and student-led religious club to meet after
school, just as it permits any other student group to do, does not
convey a message of state approval or endorsement of the particular
religion. Under the Act, a school with a limited open forum may not
lawfully deny access to a Jewish students' club, a Young Democrats
club, or a philosophy club devoted to the study of Nietzsche. To
the extent that a religious club is merely one of many different
student-initiated voluntary clubs, students should perceive no
message of government endorsement of religion. Thus, we conclude
that the Act does not, at least on its face and as applied to
Westside, have the primary effect of advancing religion.
See
id. at
454 U. S. 275
("At least in the absence of empirical evidence that religious
groups will dominate [the university's] open forum, . . . the
advancement of religion would not be the forum's
primary
effect'").
Petitioners' final argument is that, by complying with the Act's
requirement, the school risks excessive entanglement between
government and religion. The proposed club, petitioners urge, would
be required to have a faculty sponsor who would be charged with
actively directing the activities of the group, guiding its
leaders, and ensuring balance in the presentation of controversial
ideas. Petitioners claim that this influence over the club's
religious program would entangle the government in day-to-day
surveillance of religion of the type forbidden by the Establishment
Clause.
Page 496 U. S. 253
Under the Act, however, faculty monitors may not participate in
any religious meetings, and nonschool persons may not direct,
control, or regularly attend activities of student groups. §§
4071(c)(3) and (5). Moreover, the Act prohibits school
"sponsorship" of any religious meetings, § 4071(c)(2), which means
that school officials may not promote, lead, or participate in any
such meeting, § 4072(2). Although the Act permits "[t]he assignment
of a teacher, administrator, or other school employee to the
meeting for custodial purposes,"
ibid., such custodial
oversight of the student-initiated religious group, merely to
ensure order and good behavior, does not impermissibly entangle
government in the day-to-day surveillance or administration of
religious activities.
See Tony and Susan Alamo Foundation v.
Secretary of Labor, 471 U. S. 290,
471 U. S.
305-306 (1985). Indeed, as the Court noted in
Widmar, a denial of equal access to religious speech might
well create greater entanglement problems in the form of invasive
monitoring to prevent religious speech at meetings at which such
speech might occur.
See Widmar, 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 272,
n. 11.
Accordingly, we hold that the Equal Access Act does not on its
face contravene the Establishment Clause. Because we hold that
petitioners have violated the Act, we do not decide respondents'
claims under the Free Speech and Free Exercise Clauses. For the
foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
affirmed.
It is so ordered.
APPENDIX
Plaintiff's Trial Exhibit 63
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
August, 1984
BAND -- This activity is included in our regular curriculum.
Extensions of this activity include Marching Band, Ensembles, Pep
Band, and Concert Jazz Band. Performances,
Page 496 U. S. 254
presentations, and programs are presented throughout the school
year.
CHESS CLUB -- This activity is for those interested in playing
chess. Opportunities to play are held after school throughout the
school year.
CHEERLEADERS -- A girls sport cheerleader team is made up of a
junior varsity and varsity. The boys sport cheerleaders consist of
sophomores, junior varsity, and varsity. Tryouts for these spirit
groups are held each spring.
CHOIR -- This is a course offered as part of the curriculum.
Extensions of this class include Boys and Girls Glee, Warrior
Voices, and Concert and Chamber Choirs. Membership in these
activities are determined by enrollment and tryouts.
CLASS OFFICERS -- Voting and selection of junior and senior
class officers for the following year are held each spring.
Students interested in being a class officer will need to secure
support, be willing to make a presentation to their class, and
serve their class in an officer capacity for the following
year.
DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION (DECA) -- This is an organization that is
an extension of the Distributive Education class. Membership in
this activity is offered to those students involved in D.E. The
club for the current year is formulated at the beginning of school
each fall.
SPEECH & DEBATE -- This is an activity for students
interested in participating on a competitive level in both speech
and debate. The season begins the first week in November and
continues through March.
DRILL SQUAD & SQUIRES -- These are spirit groups primarily
concerned with performing at half time at football and basketball
games. Selection for these squads is made in the spring of each
school year. These marching units are also support groups for other
athletic teams.
Page 496 U. S. 255
FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS OF AMERICA (FBLA) -- This is a club
designed for students interested in pursuing the field of business.
It is open to any student with an interest. Membership begins in
the fall of each school year.
FUTURE MEDICAL ASSISTANTS (FMA) -- This is a club designed for
students with an interest in pursuing any area of medicine. The
organization assists in securing blood donations from individuals
at Westside High School for the Red Cross. Meetings are held to
inform the membership about opportunities in the medical field.
Memberships are accepted at the beginning of school each fall.
INTERACT -- This is a boys' volunteer organization associated
with the Rotary Club of America. Its basic function is to do
volunteer work within the community. They are also a support and
spirit group for our athletic teams. Membership is open to 11th and
12th grade boys, with membership opportunities being available in
the fall of each school year.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB -- This is a club designed to help students
understand people from other countries and is developed through our
foreign language classes. French, German, Spanish, and Latin
teachers encourage membership in this organization in the fall of
each year. Sponsorship of foreign students who attend Westside is
one of their major activities.
LATIN CLUB (Junior Classical League) -- This is a club designed
for those students who are taking Latin as a foreign language. This
club competes in competitive situations between schools and is
involved with state competition as well. Students have the
opportunity to join JCL beginning in the fall of each school
year.
MATH CLUB -- This club is for any student interested in
mathematics. Meetings are held periodically during the school
year.
Page 496 U. S. 256
STUDENT PUBLICATIONS -- This activity includes classes offered
in preparation of the yearbook (Shield) and the student newspaper
(Lance). Opportunities to learn about journalism are provided for
students interested in these areas. Membership in Quill and Scroll
is an extension of a student's involvement in school
publications.
STUDENT FORUM -- Each homeroom elects one representative as a
member of the student forum. Their responsibility is to provide
ideas, make suggestions, and serve as one informational group to
the staff and administration for student government. Selections are
made for this membership in the fall of each school year.
DRAMATICS -- This activity is an extension of a regular academic
class. School plays, one-act plays, and musicals are provided for
students with an interest and ability in these areas. Tryouts for
these productions are announced prior to the selection of
individuals for these activities.
CREATIVE WRITING CLUB -- This is an organization that provides
students, with the interest and capability, an opportunity to do
prose and poetry writing. This club meets periodically throughout
the year and publishes the students' work. Any student with an
interest is encouraged to become a member.
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB -- This is a club for the student who has the
interest and/or ability in photography. Students have an
opportunity to take photos of school activities. A darkroom is
provided for the students' use. Membership in this organization
begins in the fall of each school year.
ORCHESTRA -- This activity is an extension of our regular
curriculum. Performances are given periodically throughout the
year. Tryouts are held for some special groups within the
orchestra. All students signed up for that class have the
opportunity to try out.
OUTDOOR EDUCATION -- This activity is an opportunity for
interested students to be involved in the elementary
Page 496 U. S. 257
school Outdoor Education Program. High school students are used
as camp counselors and leaders for this activity. Students are
solicited to help work prior to the fall and spring Outdoor Ed
Program.
SWIMMING TIMING TEAM -- Offers an interested student a chance to
be a part of the Timing Team that is used during the competitive
swimming season. Regular season meets, invitational meets, and the
metro swim meet are swimming activities at which these volunteers
will work. Membership in these group is solicited prior to the
beginning of the competitive season.
STUDENT ADVISORY BOARD (SAB) -- Is another facet of student
government. Members are elected from each class to represent the
student body. These elections are held at the same time class
officers are elected. Any student has an opportunity to submit
their name for consideration.
INTRAMURALS -- Are offered to Westside students these following
times. Basketball begins the latter part of November and continues
through February. Coeducational volleyball is the spring intramural
activity. Announcements are made to students so they can organize
and formulate teams prior to the beginning of these activities.
COMPETITIVE ATHLETICS -- Westside High School offers students
the opportunity to try out and participate in eighteen varsity
sports. Twenty-seven different competitive teams are available for
students at each grade level. The seasons when these are offered
and the procedures for getting involved can be found in the Warrior
Bulletin that is published and distributed in August, prior to the
opening of school.
ZONTA CLUB (Z Club) -- Is a volunteer club for girls associated
with Zonta International. Approximately one hundred junior and
senior girls are involved in this volunteer organization. Eleventh
and twelfth grade students are encouraged to join in the fall of
each school year.
Page 496 U. S. 258
SUBSURFERS -- Is a club designed for students interested in
learning about skin and scuba diving and other practical
applications of that sport. Opportunities in the classroom and in
our pool are made available for students involved in this activity.
Membership is solicited in the fall and spring of each year.
WELCOME TO WESTSIDE CLUB -- Is an organization for students who
are interested in helping students new to District 66 and to
Westside High School. Activities are held for them which are geared
toward helping them become a part of our school curriculum and
activities.
WRESTLING AUXILIARY -- Is for girls interested in supporting our
competitive wrestling team. Membership is solicited prior to the
competitive wrestling season.
NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY -- Westside Honor Society is a chapter of
the national organization and is bound by its rules and
regulations. It is open to seniors who are in the upper 15% of
their class. Westside in practice and by general agreement of the
local chapter has inducted only those juniors in the upper 7% of
their class. The selection is made not only upon scholarship but
also character, leadership, and service. A committee meets and
selects those students who they believe represent the high
qualities of the organization. Induction into NHS is held in the
spring of each year.
Justice KENNEDY, with whom Justice SCALIA joins, concurring in
part and concurring in the judgment.
The Court's interpretation of the statutory term "noncurriculum
related groups" is proper and correct, in my view, and I join Parts
I and II of the Court's opinion. I further agree that the Act does
not violate the Establishment Clause, and so I concur in the
judgment; but my view of the analytic premise that controls the
establishment question differs from that employed by the plurality.
I write to explain
Page 496 U. S. 259
why I cannot join all that is said in Part III of JUSTICE
O'CONNOR's opinion.
I
A brief initial comment on the statutory issue is in order. The
student clubs recognized by Westside school officials are a far cry
from the groups given official recognition by university officials
in
Widmar v. Vincent, 454 U. S. 263
(1981). As Justice STEVENS points out in dissent, one of the
consequences of the statute, as we now interpret it, is that clubs
of a most controversial character might have access to the student
life of high schools that in the past have given official
recognition only to clubs of a more conventional kind.
See
post at
454 U. S. 271,
454 U. S.
276.
It must be apparent to all that the Act has made a matter once
left to the discretion of local school officials the subject of
comprehensive regulation by federal law. This decision, however,
was for Congress to make, subject to constitutional limitations.
Congress having decided in favor of legislative intervention, it
faced the task of formulating general statutory standards against
the background protections of the Free Speech Clause, as well as
the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses. Given the complexities
of our own jurisprudence in these areas, there is no doubt that the
congressional task was a difficult one. While I can not pretend
that the language Congress used in the Act is free from ambiguity
in some of its vital provisions, the Court's interpretation of the
phrase "noncurriculum related" seems to me to be the most rational
and indeed the most plausible interpretation available, given the
words and structure of the Act and the constitutional implications
of the subject it addresses.
There is one structural feature of the statute that should be
noted. The opinion of the Court states that "[i]f the meetings are
religious, employees or agents of the school or government may
attend only in a
nonparticipatory capacity.'" Ante at
496 U. S. 236
(quoting 20 U.S.C. § 4071(c)(3)). This is based upon a provision in
the Act in which nonparticipation is one
Page 496 U. S. 260
of several statutory criteria that a school must meet in order
to "be deemed to offer a fair opportunity to students who wish to
conduct a meeting within its limited open forum." § 4071(c). It is
not altogether clear, however, whether satisfaction of these
criteria is the sole means of meeting the statutory requirement
that schools with noncurriculum related student groups provide a
"fair opportunity" to religious clubs. § 4071(a). Although we need
not answer it today, left open is the question whether school
officials may prove that they are in compliance with the statute
without satisfying all of the criteria in § 4071(c). But in the
matter before us, the school has not attempted to comply with the
statute through any means, and we have only to determine whether it
is possible for the statute to be implemented in a constitutional
manner.
II
I agree with the plurality that a school complying with the
statute by satisfying the criteria in § 4071(c) does not violate
the Establishment Clause. The accommodation of religion mandated by
the Act is a neutral one, and, in the context of this case, it
suffices to inquire whether the Act violates either one of two
principles. The first is that the government cannot "give direct
benefits to religion in such a degree that it in fact
establishes a [state] religion or religious faith, or tends to
do so.'" County of Allegheny v. American Civil Liberties Union,
Greater Pittsburgh Chapter, 492 U. S. 573,
492 U. S. 659
(1989) (KENNEDY, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting
in part) (quoting Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.
S. 668, 465 U. S. 678
(1984)). Any incidental benefits that accompany official
recognition of a religious club under the criteria set forth in the
§ 4071(c) do not lead to the establishment of religion under this
standard. See Widmar, supra, 454 U.S. at 454 U. S.
273-274. The second principle controlling the case now
before us, in my view, is that the government cannot coerce any
student to participate in a religious activity. Cf. County of
Allegheny, supra, at 496 U. S. 659.
The Act is consistent with this standard
Page 496 U. S. 261
as well. Nothing on the face of the Act or in the facts of the
case as here presented demonstrates that enforcement of the statute
will result in the coercion of any student to participate in a
religious activity. The Act does not authorize school authorities
to require, or even to encourage, students to become members of a
religious club or to attend a club's meetings,
see §§
4071(c), (d), 4072(2); the meetings take place while school is not
in session,
see §§ 4071(b), 4072(4); and the Act does not
compel any school employee to participate in, or to attend, a
club's meetings or activities,
see §§ 4071(c), (d)(4).
The plurality uses a different test, one which asks whether
school officials, by complying with the Act, have endorsed
religion. It is true that when government gives impermissible
assistance to a religion it can be said to have "endorsed"
religion; but endorsement cannot be the test. The word endorsement
has insufficient content to be dispositive. And for reasons I have
explained elsewhere,
see Allegheny County, supra, its
literal application may result in neutrality in name but hostility
in fact when the question is the government's proper relation to
those who express some religious preference.
I should think it inevitable that a public high school
"endorses" a religious club, in a common-sense use of the term, if
the club happens to be one of many activities that the school
permits students to choose in order to further the development of
their intellect and character in an extracurricular setting. But no
constitutional violation occurs if the school's action is based
upon a recognition of the fact that membership in a religious club
is one of many permissible ways for a student to further his or her
own personal enrichment. The inquiry with respect to coercion must
be whether the government imposes pressure upon a student to
participate in a religious activity. This inquiry, of course, must
be undertaken with sensitivity to the special circumstances that
exist in a secondary school, where the line between voluntary
and
Page 496 U. S. 262
coerced participation may be difficult to draw. No such
coercion, however, has been shown to exist as a necessary result of
this statute, either on its face or as respondents seek to invoke
it on the facts of this case.
For these reasons, I join Parts I and II of the Court's opinion,
and concur in the judgment.
Justice MARSHALL, with whom Justice BRENNAN joins, concurring in
the judgment.
I agree with the majority that "noncurriculum" must be construed
broadly to "prohibit schools from discriminating on the basis of
the content of a student group's speech."
Ante at
496 U.S. 241. As the
majority demonstrates, such a construction "is consistent with
Congress' intent to provide a low threshold for triggering the
Act's requirements."
Ante at
496 U. S. 240.
In addition, to the extent that Congress intended the Act to track
this Court's free speech jurisprudence, as the dissent argues,
post at
496 U. S. 279,
n. 9, the majority's construction is faithful to our commitment to
nondiscriminatory access to open fora in public schools.
Widmar
v. Vincent, 454 U. S. 263,
454 U. S. 267
(1981). When a school allows student-initiated clubs not directly
tied to the school's curriculum to use school facilities, it has
"created a forum generally open to student groups" and is therefore
constitutionally prohibited from enforcing a "content-based
exclusion" of other student speech.
Id. at
454 U. S. 277.
In this respect, the Act as construed by the majority simply
codifies in statute what is already constitutionally mandated:
schools may not discriminate among student-initiated groups that
seek access to school facilities for expressive purposes not
directly related to the school's curriculum.
The Act's low threshold for triggering equal access, however,
raises serious Establishment Clause concerns where secondary
schools with fora that differ substantially from the forum in
Widmar are required to grant access to student religious
groups. Indeed, as applied in the present case, the Act mandates a
religious group's access to a forum that is dedicated to promoting
fundamental values and citizenship as
Page 496 U. S. 263
defined by the school. The Establishment Clause does not forbid
the operation of the Act in such circumstances, but it does require
schools to change their relationship to their fora so as to
disassociate themselves effectively from religious clubs' speech.
Thus, although I agree with the plurality that the Act as applied
to Westside could withstand Establishment Clause scrutiny,
ante at
496 U. S.
247-253 (O'CONNOR, J., joined by REHNQUIST, C.J., and
WHITE and BLACKMUN, JJ.), I write separately to emphasize the steps
Westside must take to avoid appearing to endorse the Christian
Club's goals. The plurality's Establishment Clause analysis pays
inadequate attention to the differences between this case and
Widmar, and dismisses too lightly the distinctive
pressures created by Westside's highly structured environment.
I
A
This case involves the intersection of two First Amendment
guarantees -- the Free Speech Clause and the Establishment Clause.
We have long regarded free and open debate over matters of
controversy as necessary to the functioning of our constitutional
system.
See, e.g., Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley,
408 U. S. 92,
408 U. S. 95-96
(1972) ("To permit the continued building of our politics and
culture, and to assure self-fulfillment for each individual, our
people are guaranteed the right to express any thought, free from
government censorship"). That the Constitution requires toleration
of speech over its suppression is no less true in our Nation's
schools.
See Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School
Dist., 393 U. S. 503,
393 U. S. 512
(1969);
Keyishian v. Board of Regents of Univ. of N.Y.,
385 U. S. 589,
385 U. S. 603
(1967);
Hazelwood School Dist. v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.
S. 260,
484 U. S.
280-281 (1988) (BRENNAN, J., dissenting).
But the Constitution also demands that the State not take action
that has the primary effect of advancing religion.
See, e.g.,
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602,
403 U. S. 612
(1971).
Page 496 U. S. 264
The introduction of religious speech into the public schools
reveals the tension between these two constitutional commitments,
because the failure of a school to stand apart from religious
speech can convey a message that the school endorses, rather than
merely tolerates, that speech. Recognizing the potential dangers of
school-endorsed religious practice, we have shown particular
"vigilan[ce] in monitoring compliance with the Establishment Clause
in elementary and secondary schools."
Edwards v.
Aguillard, 482 U. S. 578,
482 U. S.
583-584 (1987).
See also Wallace v. Jaffree,
472 U. S. 38,
472 U. S. 40
(1985) (invalidating statute authorizing a moment of silence in
public schools for meditation or voluntary prayer);
Illinois ex
rel. McCollum v. Board of Education of School Dist. No. 71,
333 U. S. 203
(1948) (invalidating statute providing for voluntary religious
education in the public schools). This vigilance must extend to our
monitoring of the actual effects of an "equal access" policy. If
public schools are perceived as conferring the imprimatur of the
State on religious doctrine or practice as a result of such a
policy, the nominally "neutral" character of the policy will not
save it from running afoul of the Establishment Clause.
*
B
We addressed at length the potential conflict between toleration
and endorsement of religious speech in
Widmar. There, a
religious study group sought the same access to university
facilities that the university afforded to over 100
Page 496 U. S. 265
officially recognized student groups, including many political
organizations. In those circumstances, we concluded that granting
religious organizations similar access to the public forum would
have neither the purpose nor the primary effect of advancing
religion. 454 U.S. at
454 U. S.
270-275. The plurality suggests that our conclusion in
Widmar controls this case.
Ante at
496 U. S.
248-253. But the plurality fails to recognize that the
wide-open and independent character of the student forum in
Widmar differs substantially from the forum at
Westside.
Westside currently does not recognize any student club that
advocates a controversial viewpoint. Indeed, the clubs at Westside
that trigger the Act involve scuba diving, chess, and counseling
for special education students.
Ante at
496 U. S.
245-246. As a matter of school policy, Westside
encourages student participation in clubs based on a broad
conception of its educational mission.
See App. 488;
ante at
496 U. S. 231.
That mission comports with the Court's acknowledgment
"that public schools are vitally important 'in the preparation
of individuals for participation as citizens,' and as vehicles for
'inculcating fundamental values necessary to the maintenance of a
democratic political system.'"
Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School Dist. No.
26 v. Pico, 457 U. S. 853,
457 U. S. 864
(1982) (plurality) (quoting
Ambach v. Norwick,
441 U. S. 68,
441 U. S. 76-77
(1979)). Given the nature and function of student clubs at
Westside, the school makes no effort to disassociate itself from
the activities and goals of its student clubs.
The entry of religious clubs into such a realm poses a real
danger that those clubs will be viewed as part of the school's
effort to inculcate fundamental values. The school's message with
respect to its existing clubs is not one of toleration but one of
endorsement. As the majority concedes, the program is part of the
"district's commitment to teaching academic, physical, civic, and
personal skills and values."
Ante at
496 U. S. 232.
But although a school may permissibly encourage its students to
become well-rounded as student-athletes, student-musicians, and
student-tutors, the Constitution forbids
Page 496 U. S. 266
schools to encourage students to become well-rounded as
student-worshippers. Neutrality toward religion, as required by the
Constitution, is not advanced by requiring a school that endorses
the goals of some noncontroversial secular organizations to endorse
the goals of religious organizations as well.
The fact that the Act, when triggered, provides access to
political as well as religious speech does not ameliorate the
potential threat of endorsement. The breadth of beneficiaries under
the Act does suggest that the Act may satisfy the "secular purpose"
requirement of the Establishment Clause inquiry we identified in
Lemon, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
612-613.
But see post at
496 U. S.
284-285, n. 20 (STEVENS, J., dissenting). But the
crucial question is how the Act affects each school. If a school
already houses numerous ideological organizations, then the
addition of a religion club will most likely not violate the
Establishment Clause because the risk that students will
erroneously attribute the views of the religion club to the school
is minimal. To the extent a school tolerates speech by a wide range
of ideological clubs, students cannot reasonably understand the
school to endorse all of the groups' divergent and contradictory
views. But if the religion club is the sole advocacy-oriented group
in the forum, or one of a very limited number, and the school
continues to promote its student-club program as instrumental to
citizenship, then the school's failure to disassociate itself from
the religious activity will reasonably be understood as an
endorsement of that activity. That political and other
advocacy-oriented groups are permitted to participate in a forum
that, through school support and encouragement, is devoted to
fostering a student's civic identity does not ameliorate the
appearance of school endorsement unless the invitation is accepted
and the forum is transformed into a forum like that in
Widmar.
For this reason, the plurality's reliance on
Widmar is
misplaced. The University of Missouri took concrete steps to
ensure
"that the University's name will not 'be identified in
Page 496 U. S. 267
any way with the aims, policies, programs, products, or opinions
of any organization or its members,'"
454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 274,
n. 14 (quoting University of Missouri student handbook). Westside,
in contrast, explicitly promotes its student clubs "as a vital part
of the total education program [and] as a means of developing
citizenship." App. 488. And while the University of Missouri
recognized such clubs as the Young Socialist Alliance and the Young
Democrats,
Chess v. Widmar, 635 F.2d 1310, 1312, n. 1 (CA8
1980), Westside has recognized no such political clubs, App.
488.
The different approaches to student clubs embodied in these
policies reflect a significant difference, for Establishment Clause
purposes, between the respective roles that Westside High School
and the University of Missouri attempt to play in their students'
lives. To the extent that a school emphasizes the autonomy of its
students, as does the University of Missouri, there is a
corresponding decrease in the likelihood that student speech will
be regarded as school speech. Conversely, where a school such as
Westside regards its student clubs as a mechanism for defining and
transmitting fundamental values, the inclusion of a religious club
in the school's program will almost certainly signal school
endorsement of the religious practice.
Thus, the underlying difference between this case and
Widmar is not that college and high school students have
varying capacities to perceive the subtle differences between
toleration and endorsement, but rather that the University of
Missouri and Westside actually choose to define their respective
missions in different ways. That high schools tend to emphasize
student autonomy less than universities may suggest that high
school administrators tend to perceive a difference in the maturity
of secondary and university students. But the school's behavior,
not the purported immaturity of high school students, is
dispositive. If Westside stood apart from its club program and
expressed the view, endorsed by Congress through its passage of the
Act, that high school students
Page 496 U. S. 268
are capable of engaging in wide-ranging discussion of sensitive
and controversial speech, the inclusion of religious groups in
Westside's forum would confirm the school's commitment to
nondiscrimination. Here, though, the Act requires the school to
permit religious speech in a forum explicitly designed to advance
the school's interest in shaping the character of its students.
The comprehensiveness of the access afforded by the Act further
highlights the Establishment Clause dangers posed by the Act's
application to fora such as Westside's. The Court holds that
"[o]fficial recognition allows student clubs to be part of the
student activities program and carries with it access to the school
newspaper, bulletin boards, the public address system, and the
annual Club Fair."
Ante at
496 U. S. 247
(citing App. 434-435). Students would be alerted to the meetings of
the religion club over the public address system; they would see
religion club material posted on the official school bulletin board
and club notices in the school newspaper; they would be recruited
to join the religion club at the school-sponsored Club Fair. If a
school has a variety of ideological clubs, as in
Widmar, I
agree with the plurality that a student is likely to understand
that "a school does not endorse or support student speech that it
merely permits on a nondiscriminatory basis."
Ante at
496 U. S. 250.
When a school has a religion club but no other political or
ideological organizations, however, that relatively fine
distinction may be lost.
Moreover, in the absence of a truly robust forum that includes
the participation of more than one advocacy-oriented group, the
presence of a religious club could provide a fertile ground for
peer pressure, especially if the club commanded support from a
substantial portion of the student body. Indeed, it is precisely in
a school without such a forum that intolerance for different
religious and other views would be most dangerous and that a
student who does not share the religious beliefs of his classmates
would perceive "that religion or a particular religious belief is
favored or preferred."
Page 496 U. S. 269
Wallace v. Jaffree, 472 U. S. 38,
472 U. S. 70
(1985) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in judgment).
The plurality concedes that there is a "possibility of
student peer pressure,"
ante at
496 U. S. 251,
but maintains that this does not amount to "official state
endorsement."
Ibid. This dismissal is too facile. We must
remain sensitive, especially in the public schools, to "the
numerous more subtle ways that government can show favoritism to
particular beliefs or convey a message of disapproval to others."
County of Allegheny v. ACLU, 492 U.
S. 573,
492 U. S.
627-628 (1989) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and in
judgment). When the government, through mandatory attendance laws,
brings students together in a highly controlled environment every
day for the better part of their waking hours and regulates
virtually every aspect of their existence during that time, we
should not be so quick to dismiss the problem of peer pressure as
if the school environment had nothing to do with creating and
fostering it. The State has structured an environment in which
students holding mainstream views may be able to coerce adherents
of minority religions to attend club meetings or to adhere to club
beliefs. Thus, the State cannot disclaim its responsibility for
those resulting pressures.
II
Given these substantial risks posed by the inclusion of the
proposed Christian Club within Westside's present forum, Westside
must redefine its relationship to its club program. The plurality
recognizes that such redefinition is necessary to avoid the risk of
endorsement and construes the Act accordingly. The plurality holds
that the Act "limits participation by school officials at meetings
of student religious groups,"
ante at
496 U. S. 251
(citing § 4071(c)(2) and (3)), and requires religious club meetings
to be held during noninstructional time,
ibid. (citing §
4071(b)). It also holds that schools may not sponsor any religious
meetings.
Ante at
496 U. S. 253 (citing § 4072(2)). Finally,
Page 496 U. S. 270
and perhaps most importantly, the plurality states that schools
bear the responsibility for taking whatever further steps are
necessary to make clear that their recognition of a religious club
does not reflect their endorsement of the views of the club's
participants.
Ante at
496 U. S.
251.
Westside thus must do more than merely prohibit faculty members
from actively participating in the Christian Club's meetings. It
must fully disassociate itself from the Club's religious speech and
avoid appearing to sponsor or endorse the Club's goals. It could,
for example, entirely discontinue encouraging student participation
in clubs and clarify that the clubs are not instrumentally related
to the school's overall mission. Or, if the school sought to
continue its general endorsement of those student clubs that did
not engage in controversial speech, it could do so if it also
affirmatively disclaimed any endorsement of the Christian Club.
III
The inclusion of the Christian Club in the type of forum
presently established at Westside, without more, will not assure
government neutrality toward religion. Rather, because the school
endorses the extracurricular program as part of its educational
mission, the inclusion of the Christian Club in that program will
convey to students the school-sanctioned message that involvement
in religion develops "citizenship, wholesome attitudes, good human
relations, knowledge and skills." App. 488. We need not question
the value of that message to affirm that it is not the place of
schools to issue it. Accordingly, schools such as Westside must be
responsive not only to the broad terms of the Act's coverage but
also to this Court's mandate that they effectively disassociate
themselves from the religious speech that now may become
commonplace in their facilities.
* As a majority of this Court today holds,
see ante at
496 U. S.
249-250 (O'CONNOR, J., joined by REHNQUIST, C.J., and
WHITE and BLACKMUN, JJ.);
infra at
496 U. S. 270,
the Establishment Clause proscribes public schools from "conveying
a message
that religion or a particular religious belief is
preferred,'" County of Allegheny v. ACLU, 492 U.
S. 573, 492 U. S. 627
(1989) (quoting Wallace v. Jaffree, 472 U. S.
38, 472 U. S. 70
(1985) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in
judgment)), even if such schools do not actually "impos[e] pressure
upon a student to participate in a religious activity,"
ante at 496 U. S. 261
(KENNEDY, J., concurring in part and concurring in
judgment).
Justice STEVENS, dissenting.
The dictionary is a necessary, and sometimes sufficient, aid to
the judge confronted with the task of construing an opaque
Page 496 U. S. 271
act of Congress. In a case like this, however, I believe we must
probe more deeply to avoid a patently bizarre result. Can Congress
really have intended to issue an order to every public high school
in the nation stating, in substance, that if you sponsor a chess
club, a scuba diving club, or a French club -- without having
formal classes in those subjects -- you must also open your doors
to every religious, political, or social organization, no matter
how controversial or distasteful its views may be? I think not. A
fair review of the legislative history of the Equal Access Act
(Act), 98 Stat. 1302, 20 U.S.C. §§ 4071-4074, discloses that
Congress intended to recognize a much narrower forum than the Court
has legislated into existence today.
The Act's basic design is easily summarized: when a public high
school has a "limited open forum," it must not deny any student
group access to that forum on the basis of the religious,
political, philosophical or other content of the speech of the
group. Although the consequences of having a limited open forum are
thus quite clear, the definition of such a forum is less so.
Nevertheless, there is considerable agreement about how this
difficulty must be resolved. The Court correctly identifies three
useful guides to Congress' intent. First, the text of the statute
says that a school creates a limited open forum if it allows
meetings on school premises by "noncurriculum related student
groups," a concept that is ambiguous at best. [
Footnote 1]
Ante at
496 U. S. 237.
Second, because this concept is ambiguous, the statute must be
interpreted by reference to its general purpose, as revealed by its
overall structure and by the legislative history.
Ante at
496 U. S.
238-239. Third, the Act's legislative history reveals
that Congress intended to guarantee student religious groups access
to high school fora comparable to the college forum involved in
Page 496 U. S. 272
Widmar v. Vincent, 454 U. S. 263
(1981).
Ante at
496 U. S. 235.
496 U. S. 239.
All of this is common ground, shared by the parties and by every
Court of Appeals to have construed the Act. [
Footnote 2]
A fourth agreement would seem to follow from these three. If
"noncurriculum related" is an ambiguous term, and if it must
therefore be interpreted in light of Congressional purpose, and if
the purpose of Congress was to ensure that the rule of
Widmar applied to high schools as it did to colleges, then
the incidence of the Act in this case should depend upon whether,
in light of
Widmar, Westside would have to permit the
Christian student group to meet if Westside were a college.
[
Footnote 3] The
characteristics of the college forum in
Widmar should thus
provide a useful background for interpreting the meaning of the
undefined term "noncurriculum related student groups." But this
step the Court does not take, and it is accordingly here that I
part company with it.
Our decision in
Widmar encompassed two constitutional
holdings. First, we interpreted the Free Speech Clause of the First
Amendment to determine whether the University of Missouri at Kansas
City had, by its own policies, abdicated discretion that it would
otherwise have to make content-based discriminations among student
groups seeking to meet on its campus. We agreed that it had. 454
U.S. at
454 U. S. 269;
see also id. at
454 U. S.
280-281 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment). Next, we
interpreted the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to
determine whether the University was prohibited from permitting
student-initiated religious groups to participate in that forum. We
agreed that it was
Page 496 U. S. 273
not.
Id. at
454 U. S.
270-277;
see also id. at
454 U. S.
280-281 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment).
To extend
Widmar to high schools, then, would require
us to pose two questions. We would first ask whether a high school
had established a forum comparable under our Free Speech Clause
jurisprudence to that which existed in
Widmar. Only if
this question were answered affirmatively would we then need to
test the constitutionality of the Act by asking whether the
Establishment Clause has different consequences when applied to a
high school's open forum than when applied to a college's. I
believe that in this case the first question must instead be
answered in the negative, and that this answer ultimately proves
dispositive under the Act, just as it would were only
constitutional considerations in play.
The forum at Westside is considerably different from that which
existed at the University of Missouri. In
Widmar, we held
that the University had created "a generally open forum,"
id. at
454 U. S. 269.
Over 100 officially recognized student groups routinely
participated in that forum.
Id. at
454 U. S. 265.
They included groups whose activities not only were unrelated to
any specific courses but also were of a kind that a state
university could not properly sponsor or endorse. Thus, for
example, they included such political organizations as the Young
Socialist Alliance, the Women's Union, and the Young Democrats.
See id. at
454 U. S. 274;
Chess v. Widmar, 635 F.2d 1310, 1312, and n. 1 (CA8 1980).
The University permitted use of its facilities for speakers
advocating transcendental meditation and humanism. Since the
University had allowed such organizations and speakers the use of
campus facilities, we concluded that the University could not
discriminate against a religious group on the basis of the content
of its speech. The forum established by the state university
accommodated participating groups that were "noncurriculum related"
not only because they did not mirror the school's classroom
instruction, but also because they advocated
Page 496 U. S. 274
controversial positions that a state university's obligation of
neutrality prevented it from endorsing.
The Court's opinion in
Widmar left open the question
whether its holding would apply to a public high school that had
established a similar public forum. That question has now been
answered in the affirmative by the District Court, the Court of
Appeals, and by this Court. I agree with that answer. Before the
question was answered judicially, Congress decided to answer it
legislatively in order to preclude continued unconstitutional
discrimination against high school students interested in religious
speech. According to Senator Hatfield, a cosponsor of the Act, "All
[it] does is merely to try to protect, as I say, a right that is
guaranteed under the Constitution that is being denied certain
students." 130 Cong.Rec. 19218 (1984). As the Court of Appeals
correctly recognized, the Act codified the decision in
Widmar, "extending its holding to secondary public
schools." 867 F.2d at 1076, and n. l. [
Footnote 4] What the Court of Appeals failed to recognize,
however, is the critical difference between the university forum in
Widmar and the high school forum involved in this case.
None of the clubs at the high school is even arguably controversial
or partisan. [
Footnote 5]
Page 496 U. S. 275
Nor would it be wise to ignore this difference. High school
students may be adult enough to distinguish between those
organizations that are sponsored by the school and those which lack
school sponsorship even though they participate in a forum that the
school does sponsor.
See ante at
496 U. S. 250.
But high school students are also young enough that open fora may
be less suitable for them than for college students. The need to
decide whether to risk treating students as adults too soon, or
alternatively to risk treating them as children too long, is an
enduring problem for all educators. The youth of these students,
whether described in terms of "impressionability" or "maturity,"
may be irrelevant to our application of the constitutional
restrictions that limit educational discretion in the public
schools, but it surely is not irrelevant to our interpretation of
the educational policies that have been adopted. We would do no
honor to Westside's administrators or the Congress by assuming that
either treated casually the differences between high school and
college students when formulating the policy and the statute at
issue here. [
Footnote 6]
Page 496 U. S. 276
For these reasons, I believe that the distinctions between
Westside's program and the University of Missouri's program suggest
what is the best understanding of the Act: an extracurricular
student organization is "noncurriculum related" if it has as its
purpose (or as part of its purpose) the advocacy of partisan
theological, political, or ethical views. A school that admits at
least one such club has apparently made the judgment that students
are better off if the student community is permitted to, and
perhaps even encouraged to, compete along ideological lines. This
pedagogical strategy may be defensible or even desirable. But it is
wrong to presume that Congress endorsed that strategy -- and
dictated its nationwide adoption -- simply because it approved the
application of
Widmar to high schools. And it seems absurd
to presume that Westside has invoked the same strategy by
recognizing clubs like Swim Timing Team and Subsurfers which,
though they may not correspond directly to anything in Westside's
course offerings, are no more controversial than a grilled cheese
sandwich.
Accordingly, as I would construe the Act, a high school could
properly sponsor a French club, a chess club, or a scuba diving
club simply because their activities are fully consistent with the
school's curricular mission. It would not matter whether formal
courses in any of those subjects -- or in directly related subjects
-- were being offered, as long as faculty encouragement of student
participation in such groups would be consistent with both the
school's obligation of neutrality and its legitimate pedagogical
concerns. Nothing in
Widmar implies that the existence of
a French club, for example, would create a constitutional
obligation to allow student members of the Ku Klux Klan or the
Communist Party to
Page 496 U. S. 277
have access to school facilities. [
Footnote 7] More importantly, nothing in that case
suggests that the constitutional issue should turn on whether
French is being taught in a formal course while the club is
functioning.
Conversely, if a high school decides to allow political groups
to use its facilities, it plainly cannot discriminate among
controversial groups because it agrees with the positions of some
and disagrees with the ideas advocated by others. Again, the fact
that the history of the Republican party might be taught in a
political science course could not justify a decision to allow the
young Republicans to form a club while denying Communists, white
supremacists, or Christian Scientists the same privilege. In my
judgment, the political activities of the young Republicans are
"noncurriculum related" for reasons that have nothing to do with
the content of the political science course. The statutory
definition of what is "noncurriculum related" should depend on the
constitutional concern that motivated our decision in
Widmar.
In this case, the district judge reviewed each of the clubs in
the high school program and found that they are all "tied to the
educational function of the institution." App. B to Pet. for Cert.
25-26. He correctly concluded that this club system "differs
dramatically from those found to create an open forum policy in
Widmar and
Bender."
Ibid. [
Footnote 8] I agree
Page 496 U. S. 278
with his conclusion that, under a proper interpretation of the
Act, this dramatic difference requires a different result.
As I have already indicated, the majority, although it agrees
that Congress intended by this Act to endorse the application of
Widmar to high schools, does not compare this case to
Widmar. Instead, the Court argues from two other
propositions: first, that Congress intended to prohibit
discrimination against religious groups, and, second, that the
statute must not be construed in a fashion that would allow school
boards to circumvent its reach by definitional fiat. I am in
complete agreement with both of these principles. I do not,
however, believe that either yields the conclusion which the
majority adopts.
First, as the majority correctly observes, Congress intended the
Act to prohibit schools from excluding -- or believing that they
were legally obliged to exclude -- religious student groups solely
because the groups were religious. Congress was clearly concerned
with two lines of decisions in the Courts of Appeals: one line
prohibiting schools that wished to admit student-initiated
religious groups from doing so,
see Lubbock Civil Liberties
Union v. Lubbock Independent School Dist., 669 F.2d 1038,
1042-1048 (CA5 1982),
cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1155 (1983),
and a second line allowing schools to exclude religious groups
solely because of Establishment Clause concerns,
see Brandon v.
Guilderland Bd. of Ed., 635 F.2d 971 (CA2 1980),
cert.
denied, 454 U.S. 1123 (1981);
see also Bender v.
Williamsport Area School Dist., 563 F.
Supp. 697 (MD Pa.1983),
rev'd, 741 F.2d 538 (CA3
1984),
vacated on other grounds, 475 U.
S. 534 (1986). [
Footnote
9]
See ante at
496 U. S. 239.
These cases, however, involve only schools which either desire to
recognize religious student groups or
Page 496 U. S. 279
schools which, like the University of Missouri at Kansas City,
purport to exclude religious groups from a forum that is otherwise
conceded to be open. It is obvious that Congress need go no further
than our
Widmar decision to redress this problem, and
equally obvious that the majority's expansive reading of
"noncurriculum related" is irrelevant to the Congressional
objective of ending discrimination against religious student
groups.
Second, the majority is surely correct that a "
limited open
forum should be triggered by what a school does, not by what it
says.'" Ante at 496 U. S. 244,
quoting 130 Cong. Rec. 19222 (1984) (statement of Sen. Leahy). If,
however, it is the recognition of advocacy groups that signals the
creation of such a forum, I see no danger that school
administrators will be able to manipulate the Act to defeat
Congressional intent. [Footnote
10] Indeed, it seems to me that it is the majority's own test
that is suspect on this score. [Footnote 11] It would appear that the school could alter
the "noncurriculum related" status of Subsurfers, see ante
at 496 U. S. 245,
simply by, for example, including one day of scuba instruction in
its swimming classes, or by requiring
Page 496 U. S. 280
physical education teachers to urge student participation in the
club, or even by soliciting regular comments from the club about
how the school could better accommodate the club's interest within
coursework. [
Footnote 12]
This may be what the school does rather than what it says, but the
"doing" is mere bureaucratic procedure unrelated to the substance
of the forum or the speech it encompasses.
Not only is the Court's preferred construction subject to
manipulation, but it also is exceptionally difficult to apply even
in the absence of deliberate evasion. For example, the Court
believes that Westside's swim team is "directly related" to the
curriculum, but the scuba diving club is not.
Ibid. The
Court's analysis makes every high school football program a
borderline case, for while many schools teach football in physical
education classes, they usually teach touch football or flag
football, and the varsity team usually plays tackle football.
Tackle football involves more equipment and greater risk, and so
arguably stands in the same relation to touch football as scuba
diving does to swimming. Likewise, it would appear that high school
administrators might reasonably have difficulty figuring out
whether a cheerleading squad or pep club might trigger the Act's
application. The answer, I suppose, might depend upon how strongly
students were encouraged to support the football team. Obviously,
every test will produce some hard cases, [
Footnote 13] but the Court's test seems to produce
nothing but hard cases.
Page 496 U. S. 281
For all of these reasons, the argument for construing
"noncurriculum related" by recourse to the facts of
Widmar, and so by reference to the existence of advocacy
groups, seems to me overwhelming. It provides a test that is both
more simple and more easily administered than what the majority has
crafted. Indeed, the only plausible answer to this construction of
the statute is that it could easily be achieved without reference
to the exotic concept of "noncurriculum related" organizations.
This point was made at length on the Senate floor by Senator
Gorton. [
Footnote 14]
Senator Hatfield answered that the term had been recommended to him
by lawyers, apparently in an effort to capture the distinctions
important to the judiciary's construction of the Free Speech
clause. [
Footnote 15]
Page 496 U. S. 282
Congress may sometimes, however, have a clear intent with
respect to the whole of a statute even when it muddles the
definition of a particular part, just as, in other cases, the
intent behind a particular provision may be clear though the more
comprehensive purpose of the statute is obscure. In this case,
Congress' general intent is -- as Senator Gorton certainly
understood -- a necessary guide to the Act's more particular terms.
In answer to this strategy, the Court points out that references to
Widmar must be considered in context.
Ante at
496 U. S.
242-243. That is surely so. But when this is done, it
becomes immediately clear that those references are neither "few"
nor "passing" nor even "general,"
ibid.; they are instead
the sheet anchors holding fast a debate that would otherwise be
swept away in a gale of confused utterances. [
Footnote 16]
Page 496 U. S. 283
We might wish, along with Senator Gorton, that Congress had
chosen a better term to effectuate its purposes. But our own
efforts to articulate "public forum" analysis have not, in my
opinion, been altogether satisfactory.
See Cornelius v. NAACP
Legal Defense & Ed Fund Inc., 473 U.
S. 788,
473 U. S. 833
(1985) (STEVENS, J., dissenting). [
Footnote 17] Lawyers and legislators seeking to capture
our distinctions in legislative terminology should be forgiven if
they occasionally stumble. [
Footnote 18] Certainly
Page 496 U. S. 284
we should not hold Congress to a standard of precision we
ourselves are sometimes unable to obtain. "Our duty is to ask what
Congress intended, and not to assay whether Congress might have
stated that intent more naturally, more artfully, or more pithily."
Sullivan v. Everhart, 494 U. S. 83
(STEVENS, J., dissenting).
II
My construction of the Act makes it unnecessary to reach the
Establishment Clause question that the Court decides. [
Footnote 19] It is nevertheless
appropriate to point out that the question is much more difficult
than the Court assumes. [
Footnote 20]
Page 496 U. S. 285
The plurality focuses upon whether the Act might run afoul of
the Establishment Clause because of the danger that some students
will mistakenly believe that the student-initiated religious clubs
are sponsored by the school. [
Footnote 21] I believe that the
Page 496 U. S. 286
majority's construction of the statute obliges it to answer a
further question: whether the Act violates the Establishment Clause
by authorizing religious organizations to meet on high school
grounds even when the high school's teachers and administrators
deem it unwise to admit controversial or partisan organizations of
any kind.
Under the Court's interpretation of the Act, Congress has
imposed a difficult choice on public high schools receiving federal
financial assistance. If such a school continues to allow students
to participate in such familiar and innocuous activities as a
school chess or scuba diving club, it must also allow religious
groups to make use of school facilities. Indeed,
Page 496 U. S. 287
it is hard to see how a cheerleading squad or a pep club, among
the most common student groups in American high schools, could
avoid being "noncurriculum related" under the majority's test. The
Act, as construed by the majority, comes perilously close to an
outright command to allow organized prayer, and perhaps the kind of
religious ceremonies involved in
Widmar, on school
premises.
We have always treated with special sensitivity the
Establishment Clause problems that result when religious
observances are moved into the public schools.
Edwards v.
Aguillard, 482 U. S. 578,
482 U. S.
583-584 (1987).
"The public school is at once the symbol of our democracy and
the most pervasive means for promoting our common destiny. In no
activity of the State is it more vital to keep out divisive forces
than in its schools, . . ."
Illinois ex rel. McCollum Board of Education, School Dist.
No. 71, 333 U. S. 203,
333 U. S. 231
(1948) (Frankfurter, J., concurring). As the majority recognizes,
ante at
496 U. S. 251,
student-initiated religious groups may exert a considerable degree
of pressure even without official school sponsorship. "The law of
imitation operates, and nonconformity is not an outstanding
characteristic of children."
McCollum, 333 U.S. at
333 U. S. 227
(Frankfurter, J., concurring);
see also Abington School Dist.
v. Schempp, 374 U. S. 203,
374 U. S.
290-291 (1963) (BRENNAN, J., concurring). Testimony in
this case indicated that one purpose of the proposed Bible Club was
to convert students to Christianity. App. 185. The influence that
could result is the product not only of the Equal Access Act and
student-initiated speech but also of the compulsory attendance
laws, which we have long recognized to be of special constitutional
importance in this context.
Id. at
374 U. S.
252-253;
Wallace v. Jaffree, 472 U. S.
38,
472 U. S. 60, n.
51 (1985). Moreover, the speech allowed is not simply the
individual expression of personal conscience, as was the case in
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Dist.,
393 U. S. 503
(1969), or
West Virginia State Bd of Ed. v. Barnette,
319 U. S. 624
(1943), but is instead the collective statement of an
organization
Page 496 U. S. 288
-- a "student club," with powers and responsibilities defined by
that status -- that would not exist absent the state's
intervention. [
Footnote
22]
I tend to agree with the Court that the Constitution does not
forbid a local school district, or Congress, from bringing
organized religion into the schools so long as all groups,
religious or not, are welcomed equally if "they do not break either
the laws or the furniture." [
Footnote 23] That Congress has such authority, however,
does not mean that the concerns underlying the Establishment Clause
are irrelevant when, and if, that authority is exercised. [
Footnote 24] Certainly we should not
rush to embrace the conclusion that Congress swept aside these
concerns by the hurried passage of clumsily drafted legislation.
[
Footnote 25]
Page 496 U. S. 289
There is an additional reason, also grounded in constitutional
structure, why the Court's rendering of the Act is unsatisfying: so
construed, the Act alters considerably the balance between state
and federal authority over education, a balance long respected by
both Congress and this Court.
See, e.g., Board of Education,
Island Trees Union Free School Dist. No. 26 v. Pico,
457 U. S. 853,
457 U. S.
863-864 (1982). The traditional allocation of
responsibility makes sense for pedagogical, political, and ethical
reasons. [
Footnote 26] We
have, of course, sometimes found it necessary to limit local
control over schools in order to protect the constitutional
integrity of public education.
"That [Boards of Education] are educating
Page 496 U. S. 290
the young for citizenship is reason for scrupulous protection of
Constitutional freedoms of the individual, if we are not to
strangle the free mind at its source and teach youth to discount
important principles of our government as mere platitudes."
West Virginia Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. at
319 U. S. 637;
see also Brown v. Topeka Bd. of Education, 347 U.
S. 483 (1954);
Missouri v. Jenkins,
495 U. S. 33
(1990). Congress may make similar judgments, and has sometimes done
so, finding it necessary to regulate public education in order to
achieve important national goals.
The Court's construction of this Act, however, leads to a
sweeping intrusion by the federal government into the operation of
our public schools, and does so despite the absence of any
indication that Congress intended to divest local school districts
of their power to shape the educational environment. If a high
school administration continues to believe that it is sound policy
to exclude controversial groups, such as political clubs, the Ku
Klux Klan, and perhaps gay rights advocacy groups from its
facilities, it now must also close its doors to traditional
extracurricular activities that are noncontroversial but not
directly related to any course being offered at the school.
Congress made frequent reference to the primacy of local control in
public education, and the legislative history of the Act is thus
inconsistent with the Court's rigid definition of "noncurriculum
related groups." [
Footnote
27] Indeed,
Page 496 U. S. 291
the very fact that Congress omitted any definition in the
statute itself is persuasive evidence of an intent to allow local
officials broad discretion in deciding whether or not to create
limited public fora. I see no reason -- and no evidence of
congressional intent -- to constrain that discretion any more
narrowly than our holding in
Widmar requires.
III
Against all these arguments, the Court interposes Noah Webster's
famous dictionary. It is a massive tome, but no match for the
weight the Court would put upon it. The Court relies heavily on the
dictionary's definition of "curriculum."
See ante at
496 U. S. 237.
That word, of course, is not the Act's; moreover, the word
"noncurriculum" is not in the dictionary. Neither Webster nor
Congress has authorized us to assume that "noncurriculum" is a
precise antonym of the word "curriculum." "Nonplus," for example,
does not mean "minus," and it would be incorrect to assume that a
"nonentity" is not an "entity" at all. Purely as a matter of
defining a newly-coined word, the term "noncurriculum" could fairly
be construed to describe either the subjects that are "not a part
of the current curriculum" or the subjects that "cannot properly be
included in a public school curriculum." Either of those
definitions is perfectly "sensible," because both describe subjects
"that are not related to the body of courses offered by the
school."
See ante at
496 U. S. 237.
When one considers the basic purpose of the Act and its
unquestioned linkage to our decision in
Widmar, the latter
definition surely is the more "sensible."
I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
For an extensive discussion of the phrase and its ambiguity,
see Laycock, Equal Access and Moments of Silence: The
Equal Status of Religious Speech by Private Speakers, 81
Nw.U.L.Rev. 1, 36-41 (1986).
[
Footnote 2]
Brief for Petitioners 58-59, Brief for Respondents 34-40; Brief
for the United States as
Amicus Curiae 17-19, and nn.
21-22 (Act codifies
Widmar),
id. at 22
("noncurriculum related" is an undefined term);
id. at 25
("noncurriculum related" should be construed by reference to the
"larger objectives" of the Act); 867 F.2d 1076, 1078-1079 (CA8
1989);
Garnett v. Renton School Dist. No. 403, 874 F.2d
608, 613-614 (CA9 1989).
[
Footnote 3]
We would, of course, then have to consider, as the Court does
now, whether the Establishment Clause permits Congress to apply
Widmar's reasoning to secondary schools.
[
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals quoted the following comment by Senator
Levin:
"[T]he pending amendment is constitutional in light of the
Supreme Court's decision in Widmar against Vincent. This amendment
merely extends a similar constitutional rule as enunciated by the
Court in Widmar to secondary schools."
130 Cong.Rec. 19236 (1984) (statement of Sen. Levin).
Other Senators agreed.
See id. at 19221 (statement of
Sen. Leahy);
id, at 19237 (" . . . the Court was right in
Widmar, and this bill seeks only to clarify and extend the law of
that case a bit. . . . What we seek to do by this amendment is make
clear that the same rule of law applies to students in our public
secondary schools") (statement of Sen. Bumpers);
id. at
19239 (statement of Sen. Biden).
See also Brief for United
States as
Amicus Curiae 17-19, nn. 21-22 (collecting
references to
Widmar from Senate and House debates).
[
Footnote 5]
The Court of Appeals also put too much weight upon the existence
of a chess club at Westside. The court quoted an exchange between
Senator Gorton and Senator Hatfield in which Senator Hatfield, a
cosponsor of the Act, told Senator Gorton that a chess club would
be "noncurriculum related" under the Act. 867 F.2d at 1078-1079.
The exchange is completely inconclusive, however, when read in
context. Senator Gorton's questions were designed to show that
Senator Hatfield could not offer any satisfactory definition of
"noncurriculum related." Senator Gorton's strategy succeeded, and
in the course of the exchange, Senator "Hatfield offered just about
every possible interpretation in less than two columns of the
Congressional Record" Laycock, 81 Nw.U.L.Rev. at 37.
Senator Hatfield eventually conceded that whether a chess club was
"noncurriculum related" would depend upon what the school
district's lawyers had to say about it. 130 Cong.Rec. 19225. This
Court's majority does not place any special emphasis upon Senator
Hatfield's reference to chess clubs,
see ante at
496 U. S.
245-246 (discussing chess clubs without reference to the
legislative history), and I agree that it deserves none.
[
Footnote 6]
What I have said before of universities is true
a
fortiori with respect to high schools: a school's
extracurricular activities constitute a part of the school's
teaching mission, and the school accordingly must make "decisions
concerning the content of those activities."
Widmar v.
Vincent, 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 278
(STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment). Absent good reason to hold
otherwise, these decisions should be left to teachers.
Id.
at
454 U. S. 279
and n. 2.
See also Bethel School Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser,
478 U. S. 675,
478 U. S. 691,
and n. 1 (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 7]
Although I recognize that Justice MARSHALL reads
Widmar
more broadly, I respectfully disagree with that reading. Moreover,
even if language in
Widmar supported that reading, the
language would be
dictum, given the distinction --
acknowledged to be critical -- between "the wide open and
independent character of the student forum in
Widmar" and
the substantially different character of Westside's program.
See ante at
496 U. S. 285
(MARSHALL, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 8]
In
Bender v. Williamsport Area School
Dist., 563 F.
Supp. 697 (MD Pa.1983), the school officials conceded that any
organization conducive to the intellectual or moral growth of
students could meet during the activities period. Unlike the school
officials in this case, the Williamsport officials had not claimed
that the forum was limited on the basis of whether a group
presented a one-sided view of controversial subjects.
Id.
at 706-707.
[
Footnote 9]
The
Bender litigation was pending before the Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit when the Act was drafted, and was
much discussed by the Act's sponsors.
[
Footnote 10]
Since the statute as I construe it would track our own Free
Speech Clause jurisprudence, administrators could no more escape
the Act's restrictions by mere labeling than they could escape the
First Amendment itself by such means.
[
Footnote 11]
According to the Court,
"In our view, a student group directly relates to a school's
curriculum if the subject matter of the group is actually taught,
or will soon be taught, in a regularly offered course; if the
subject matter of the group concerns the body of courses as a
whole; if participation in the group is required for a particular
course; or if participation in the group results in academic
credit."
Ante at
496 U. S.
239-240. The Court clarifies the meaning of the second
part of this test by suggesting that
"[a] school's student government would generally relate directly
to the curriculum to the extent that it addresses concerns,
solicits opinions, and formulates proposals pertaining to the body
of courses offered by the school."
Ibid. Likewise, the fact that the International Club is
"
developed through our foreign language classes'" suffices to
satisfy the Court's test, presumably as a result of its first
prong. See ante at 496 U. S.
246.
[
Footnote 12]
The club's membership might have a special interest in seeing
more attention devoted to icthyological topics in biology classes,
in adding oceanographic examples to physics classes, and in
allowing advanced students in the school shops to design snorkeling
gear. As I understand the majority's test, Subsurfers would not be
"noncurriculum related" so long as the club made such suggestions
as these on a regular basis, even if the Westside administration
regularly thanked the club and rejected every suggestion it made.
See ante at
496 U. S. 240
(discussing the student government).
[
Footnote 13]
Under my reading of the statute, for example, a difficult case
might be posed if a district court were forced to decide whether a
high school's Nietzsche Club were concerned with philology or
doctrine. None of the very common clubs at Westside, however,
causes any difficulties for this test, while nearly all of them
present close questions if examined pursuant to the Court's rubric.
The Nietzsche Club is a problem that can be dealt with when it
actually arises.
[
Footnote 14]
Senator Gorton proposed replacing the Act with another, which
read:
"No public secondary school receiving Federal financial
assistance shall prohibit the use of school facilities for meetings
during noninstructional time by voluntary student groups solely on
the basis that some or all of the speech engaged in by members of
such groups during their meetings is or will be religious in
nature."
130 Cong.Rec. 19225 (1984).
[
Footnote 15]
Senator Hatfield attributed the Act's complex terminology to
"too many lawyers wanting to put something down to satisfy one
particular legal point of view, one legal school, or one precedent,
or one court decision, or one experience."
Ibid.
In light of this admission and similar statements, it is
astonishing that the United States asks us to believe that
Congress, by using the phrase "noncurriculum related," intended to
reject
Widmar's definition of an "open forum" in favor of
a definition that would be "highly specific" and less confusing.
See Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae
20-21. I am instead inclined to agree with Professor Laycock, who
observes that "[a] House opponent [of the Act] was surely correct
when he said that not even the sponsors of the bill knew what it
meant." Laycock, 81 Nw.U.L.Rev. at 38. The bill's supporters
admitted that its language was murky, but suggested that something
was better than nothing.
See 130 Cong.Rec. 20946
(statement of Rep. Hyde). If Congress really intended to depart
from
Widmar for reasons of administrative clarity,
Congress kept its intent well hidden, both in the statute and in
the debates preceding its passage.
[
Footnote 16]
The Court makes a gallant and commendable effort to vindicate
Congress' peculiar diction. But I fear that, in the end, the
Court's dogged persistence leads it to miss the forest for the
trees. The Court quite properly points out that Congress' general
intent cannot be established by a single reference, or even several
statements, sundered from context. One can, of course, no more
deduce the meaning of legislative history by quoting one randomly
chosen Senator than one can capture the meaning of a play by
quoting one randomly chosen character. To say that Polonius,
Claudius, and Gertrude express differing views about Hamlet's
"antic disposition" is not to say that Hamlet has no meaning. No
reader of the congressional drama in this case can come away
unimpressed by its focus upon
Widmar: the congressional
actors quite clearly agreed that
Widmar's rule should be
extended to high schools, but were confused about how to draft a
statute that did so. Nothing quoted by the Court so much as hints
at a contrary reading.
The Court's discussion of Senator Levin's speech,
ante
at
496 U. S. 243,
is especially puzzling. The Court says that this dissent "plac[es]
great reliance on a comment by Senator Levin."
Ibid. In
fact, Senator Levin's remark is one among four specific citations
in a single footnote, and is further buttressed by the more than
twenty additional citations collected in the Brief of the United
States as
Amicus Curiae. See n.
4 supra. The footnote singles out Senator
Levin for special attention not because his views are of unique
importance, but because his remarks were quoted by the Court of
Appeals.
Ibid. Still odder is the Court's own use of
Senator Levin. The Court quotes the Senator as saying,
"The pending amendment will allow students equal access to
secondary schools student-initiated religious meetings before and
after school where the school generally allows groups of secondary
school students to meet during those times."
130 Cong.Rec. 19236 (1984). The Court emphasizes the word
"generally." This word, however, puts Senator Levin in square
opposition to the Court's reading of the Act. I agree with the
Senator that the Act authorizes meetings by religious
student-initiated groups in schools that permit meetings by student
groups in general; the Court, however, must show that the Act
authorizes such meetings even in schools that have a less generally
open forum, one defined specifically enough to exclude partisan
ideological organizations. Senator Levin's statement does not help
the Court.
Nor can the Court claim any assistance from the reservations
expressed by Senators Chiles and Denton about the legislative
history,
ante at
496 U. S. 243;
when their remarks are considered in context, it becomes
immediately apparent that both men were addressing specific
problems completely unrelated to the Act's connection with
Widmar.
[
Footnote 17]
See also Farber & Nowak, The Misleading Nature of
Public Forum Analysis: Content and Context in First Amendment
Adjudication, 70 Va.L.Rev. 1219, 1223-1225 (1984), L. Tribe,
American Constitutional Law § 12-24 (2d ed. 1988).
[
Footnote 18]
The Court would have us believe that the step is not a stumble,
but a pirouette: the Court declares that any possible
interpretation of the Act must concede that Congress intended to
draw a subtle distinction between a "limited public forum" and a
"limited open forum."
Ante at
496 U. S. 242.
For the reasons given in n. 15,
supra, I find this
suggestion implausible: the drafting of this legislation was not so
finely choreographed.
Moreover, this Court's own opinion in
Widmar refers, in
quick succession and without apparent distinction, to "a forum
generally open to the public," 454 U.S. at
454 U. S. 268;
"a generally open forum,"
id. at
454 U. S. 269;
and "a public forum,"
id. at 270. The District Court
opinion in
Bender -- an opinion of great concern to
Congress when it passed this Act -- observed that "a university
which accommodates student organizations by making its facilities
generally open' for their meetings will have created a
`limited' public forum." 563 F.Supp., at 705. In the same month the
Act was passed, the Court of Appeals' opinion in Bender
closed the circle by using "limited open forum" to describe the
First Amendment status of both the college forum in Widmar
and the high school forum in Bender. Bender v. Williamsport
Area School Dist., 741 F.2d 538, 547, n. 12 (CA3 1984);
id. at 550. It would be wrong to say that the Court today
slices these distinctions too thin: there is in fact no distinction
for the slicing.
Even were I to accept the Court's premise, however, it would not
lead me to the Court's conclusion. It does not seem that a "limited
open forum" would be, as the Court must suppose, narrower in scope
than a "limited public forum." Dictionary definitions, which the
Court seems to favor, point in the opposite direction.
[
Footnote 19]
We consider Establishment Clause questions under the three-part
analysis set forth in
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.
S. 602,
403 U. S.
612-613 (1971):
"First, the statute must have a secular legislative purpose;
second, its principal or primary effect must be one that neither
advances nor inhibits religion, . . . ; finally, the statute must
not foster 'an excessive government entanglement with
religion.'"
(Citations omitted.)
[
Footnote 20]
The difficulty of the constitutional question compounds the
problems with the Court's treatment of the statutory issue. In
light of the ambiguity which it concedes to exist in both the
statutory text and the legislative history, the Court has an
obligation to adopt an equally reasonable construction of the Act
that will avoid the constitutional issue.
Cf. NLRB v. Catholic
Bishops of Chicago, 440 U. S. 490,
440 U. S. 500
(1979).
[
Footnote 21]
The Court also considers briefly, and then rejects, the
possibility that the Act may lack the "secular purpose" required by
the Establishment Clause.
See ante at
496 U. S.
248-249. In my view, that question, too, is closer than
the Court suggests. There is no doubt that the purpose of this Act
is to facilitate meetings by religious student organizations at
public high schools.
See, e.g., 130 Cong.Rec. 19216
(statement of Sen. Denton). There would nevertheless be no problem
with the Act if it did no more than redress discrimination against
religion.
See Corporation of Presiding Bishop, Church of
Latterday Saints v. Amos, 483 U. S. 327,
483 U. S. 338
(1987) (characterizing as "proper" the statutory "purpose of
lifting a regulation that burdens the exercise of religion," even
if the resulting exemption does not "come packaged with benefits to
secular entities"). Under the Court's reading of the Act, however,
Congress had a considerably more expansive purpose: that of
authorizing religious groups to meet even in schools that prohibit
assembly of all partisan organizations and thus do not single out
religious groups in particular. The Act also authorizes meetings of
political or philosophic as well as religious groups, but it is
clear that Congress was principally interested in religious speech.
Ante at
496 U. S. 239.
The application of
Lemon's secular purpose requirement to
the Act thus becomes more complicated.
When examining this issue, the Court quite properly recognizes
that we must distinguish between religious
motives and
religious
purposes. See ante at
496 U. S. 249.
The Court, however, misapplies the distinction. If a particular
legislator were to vote for a bill on the basis of a personal,
religious belief that free speech is a good thing, the legislator
would have a religious motive. That motive would present no problem
under the Establishment Clause. If, however, the legislator were to
vote for the bill on the basis of a prediction that the resulting
speech would be religious in character, then the legislator would
have a religious purpose. That would present a problem under the
Establishment Clause. It is, moreover, entirely possible that this
religious purpose might exist even absent a religious motive, as
would be the case if the legislator's only reason for favoring
religious speech was a belief that it would tend to produce
cooperative behavior and so reduce the crime rate. It is the
latter, not the former, kind of religious intention that is at
issue here. As such, the Court's analysis of
Lemon's
purpose requirement presupposes that having a religious purpose for
enacting a statute becomes analogous to having a religious motive
for enacting the statute whenever the statute confers some
incidental benefit upon secular activity. With this I cannot
agree.
To survive scrutiny under the
Lemon test, it is not
enough that a statute's sponsors identify some secular goals
allegedly served by the Act. We have held that a statute is
unconstitutional if it "does not have a clearly secular purpose,"
Wallace v. Jaffree, 472 U. S. 38,
472 U. S. 56, or
if its "primary purpose was to . . . provide persuasive advantage
to a particular religious doctrine."
Edwards v. Aguillard,
482 U. S. 578,
482 U. S. 592
(1987). A law requiring that the Ten Commandments be posted in
school classrooms is not vindicated by the possibility that reading
it would teach students about a "fundamental legal code,"
Stone
v. Graham, 449 U. S. 39,
449 U. S. 41
(1980), and a law requiring recitation of the Lord's Prayer is
likewise not saved by assertions -- true or not -- that such a
practice serves the
"promotion of moral values, the contradiction to the
materialistic trends of our times, the perpetuation of our
institutions and the teaching of literature."
Abington School Dist. v. Schempp, 374 U.
S. 203,
374 U. S. 223
(1963).
In sum, the crucial question, under the purpose requirement of
the
Lemon test, is whether the challenged statute reflects
a judgment that it would be desirable for people to be religious,
or to adhere to a particular religion. The Court is correct to
observe that it is irrelevant whether the legislature itself
behaved religiously when it made (or abstained from making) that
judgment. The Court's observation, however, is likewise irrelevant
to the question before us. The Equal Access Act may nevertheless
comply with the purpose requirement of the
Lemon test by
encompassing political and philosophic as well as religious speech,
but that conclusion requires more explanation than the Court
provides.
[
Footnote 22]
Respondents have sought not merely access to school meeting
rooms, but also "the same rights, privileges, terms, and conditions
accorded to other clubs" at Westside. Brief for Respondents 1, and
n. 2. In this respect, at least this case resembles
Hazelwood
School Dist. v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U. S. 260
(1988), more than it does
Tinker, supra. Cf.
Stewart, The First Amendment, The Public Schools, and the
Inculcation of Community Values, 18 J.Law & Ed. 23, 36 (1989)
(stressing distinction between "cases . . . in which students seek
only to prevent state interference with their communicative
activities, and cases . . . in which students seek active
assistance in the dissemination of their ideas").
[
Footnote 23]
The quotation is from Congressman Frank, who spoke in support of
the bill on the House floor. 130 Cong.Rec. 20933 (1984).
[
Footnote 24]
The bill enjoyed "wide, bipartisan" support in both Houses,
ante at
496 U. S. 239,
but it likewise provoked thoughtful, bipartisan opposition in each
body. Senator Chafee was among those who opposed the bill; he
warned his colleagues that passing it might secure religious access
to the schools only at the price of educational quality:
"Legislation to encourage religious and political activity in
the schools will do little to resolve our problems in education,
but could lead to discord between those whose cooperation in the
drive for excellence in education is more important than ever."
130 Cong.Rec. 19248.
[
Footnote 25]
Professor Laycock summarizes the circumstances of the Act's
passage as follows:
"The bill was completely rewritten in a series of multilateral
negotiations after it was passed by the House and reported out of
committee in the Senate. Thus, the committee reports cast no light
on the language actually adopted. Senator Hatfield offered the
negotiated compromise as a floor amendment in the midst of the
Senate's rush to adjourn for the Fourth of July. He repeatedly
emphasized that as many as 1,000 people had been involved in the
negotiations that produced the compromise version, and that not all
the senators sponsoring the compromise agreed with everything in
it. Senator Gorton accurately observed that too many cooks had
spoiled the broth. But Hatfield had a large majority committed to
his compromise, and he resisted any change that might have caused
the deal to fall apart. The Hatfield compromise later passed the
House under a special rule that precluded amendments and limited
debate to one hour."
Laycock, 81 Nw.U.L.Rev. at 37 (footnotes omitted).
[
Footnote 26]
As a matter of pedagogy, delicate decisions about immersing
young students in ideological cross-currents ought to be made by
educators familiar with the experience and needs of the particular
children affected, and with the culture of the community in which
they are likely to live as adults.
See Hazelwood School Dist.
v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.S. at
484 U. S.
271-272. As a matter of politics, public schools are
often dependent for financial support upon local communities. The
schools may be better able to retain local favor if they are free
to shape their policies in response to local preferences.
See
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
411 U. S. 1,
411 U. S. 49-53
(1973). As a matter of ethics, it is sensible to respect the desire
of parents to guide the education of their children without
surrendering control to distant politicians.
See Meyer v.
Nebraska, 262 U. S. 390,
262 U. S.
399-403 (1923).
[
Footnote 27]
See e.g., 130 Cong.Rec. 19217 (1984) ("I am fully
committed to the proposition that schools and education in general
must be under the guidance and control of local school districts
local school boards, State school boards, and so forth. But where
there is an action that is taken by such an official body,
representing the public schools, which denies a right that is
guaranteed under the Constitution, then the Congress of the United
States, I think, has a duty and an obligation to step in and remedy
that violated right") (statement of Sen. Hatfield). The Court does
not suggest that Westside has deprived its students of any
constitutionally guaranteed rights in this case.
See also
id. at 20941 ("The bill only applies if the school voluntarily
creates a limited open forum. Everything is left to the local
option. Everything is left to the local administrators and the
local school board") (statement of Rep. Goodling).