Protection against being subjected to unreasonable searches and seizures is provided to all American citizens by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. Students, as citizens, get to enjoy that right also. School officials are less limited than police with respect to searches, and do not have to procure a warrant or a probable cause to initiate a search. They can conduct a search based on the presence of reasonable suspicion.
With the increasing need to address issues such as the elimination of drugs and weapons, laws with respect to search and seizure have become more diversified. Newer means of detection of banned items have emerged, which has made search and seizure more complicated. On the whole, a search by school officials can be justified as long the following guidelines are adhered to:
· The school employee has to have reasonable grounds to conduct the search and the circumstances have to justify the action at its inception.
· The authorities conducting the search have to be careful about the reasonableness of their actions in terms of the situation and the age and gender of the students.
· For any search to take place, a reasonable basis of suspicion against the student must exist. Mere doubts do not give the license to the school authorities to conduct searches.
· The routine search of lockers and desks is acceptable and can be made to be a part of the normal procedure. It should be school policy that parents are informed beforehand of these searches.
· The more invasive a search, the stronger the probable cause should be.
Authorities must also take certain precautions when conducting a search. For example, a male official cannot conduct a physical inspection of a female student as that could amount to sexual harassment. If backed by a reasonable cause, searching students' purses, book bags, lockers, packages and automobiles parked on school property is completely acceptable.
But in the absence of strong suspicion, any search, or strip-search is utterly unacceptable. Personal searches are required to be carried out in private, and by the officials of the same gender. Also, the provision of alternate clothing for the accused while the search is being carried out is a must. The use of "sniffer dogs" when a reasonable suspicion exists that a student is carrying drugs, is allowed.
Published by Matthew Lynch
Dr. Lynch is an Assistant Professor of Education at Widener University, a blogger for the Huffington Post, and an education advice columnist for Education World. He spent seven years as a K-12 teacher, which... View profile
- The Necessity of Education ReformI extoll the need for rapid reform to our current educational institution in order for the United States to maintain its current position as the center for technological innovation.
An Explanation of Probable CauseThe Westlaw dictionary defines probable cause as "reasonable grounds for the belief that the accused is guilty of a crime".
Criminal Law: Fourth Amendment Search and SeizureThe 4th Amendment protects Americans form the government's use of illegal searches and seizures. This article describes the rules, the consequences and the exceptions.- Search and SeizureThe article focuses on three topics: squeezing of luggage in a bus, searches and seizures of private persons, and use of police dogs for detection of drugs.
- Essays on the Fourth and Fifth Amendment"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall be issued..."
- Is the U.S. Violating the Constitution and International Law to Halt Drug Trade?
- Can US Customs Search & Seize Your Laptop Computer Without Cause? YES They Can!
- The Controversy of Body Cavity Searches
- A Comparison of Federal and Massachusetts Law on Automobile Searches and Seizures:
- Labor Issues, Accountability at the Root of Education Reform
- Education Reform: Can You Over Emphasize Math and Science?
- Autism Education Reform!

