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Basketball hair cut

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Vale Middle School Reading Article
Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
Instructions: COMPLETE ALL QUESTIONS AND MARGIN NOTES
Questions: Answer in COMPLETE SENTENCES unless otherwise instructed. Lists and charts are the
exception and may be answered in phrases.
Read the following article carefully and make notes in the margin as you read.
Your notes should include:
o Comments that show that you understand the article. (A summary or statement of the main
idea of important sections may serve this purpose.)
o Questions you have that show what you are wondering about as you read.
o Notes that differentiate between fact and opinion.
o Observations about how the writer’s strategies (organization, word choice, perspective,
support) and choices affect the article.
Your margin notes are part of your score for this assessment.
Student _________________________________Class Period______________________
Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
By Carrie Ritchie, The Indy Star
The parents of a former Greensburg Junior High basketball player are asking a federal
court to declare the team's haircut policy unconstitutional.
In a lawsuit filed last week in U.S. District Court in Indianapolis, Patrick and Melissa
Hayden say team rules governing the length of players' hair violate their son's right to
wear his hair the way he wants and also treat male and female athletes differently
because female players don't have to adhere to the same guidelines. Their 14-year-old
son, identified as A.H. in the lawsuit, was kicked off the team this fall after he refused
to cut his hair to comply with team rules, which require players' hair to be above their
eyebrows, collars, and ears.
The Haydens said in the lawsuit that they met with the basketball coach and school
officials, but no one would change the policy. So they sued. "What they're trying to do
here is teach (their son) a life lesson, which simply is that you fight for what's right,"
said Ron Frazier, the Haydens' attorney. "This is classic David versus Goliath, and they
want their son to understand that."
The Haydens are asking the court to force the schools to stop enforcing the team's
haircut policy and rule that it's unconstitutional, as well as award any necessary
damages to the family. But the school district claims the policy didn't violate the boy's
rights, partly because participating in extracurricular activities is a privilege, not a right.
Courts split in hair rulings
Courts have been divided in their rulings about grooming policies in schools, said David
Hudson, First Amendment scholar at the First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt
Notes on my thoughts,
reactions and questions as I
read:
Vale Middle School Reading Article
Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
University. Some rulings support students' right to wear their hair as they choose during
school, but generally, Hudson said, "schools are given more leeway with extracurricular
activities."
In 2003, a federal court in Missouri dismissed a case in which a basketball player sued a
school district because coaches wouldn't let him wear cornrows in his hair. The court
decided that participation in extracurricular activities is a privilege, not a right, and that
the policy didn't violate the player's constitutional rights.
An attorney for Greensburg Community Schools said the Haydens' claims likely are
invalid for that same reason. He also questioned whether U.S. District Court is the
appropriate venue for this case, based on recent rulings on related issues. The schools
didn't deny the boy the right to an education or kick him out of school, said Tuck
Hopkins, who represents the school district. "It's two different standards," he said.
"There is no right to engage in extracurricular activities."
Greensburg Junior High's athletic code bans hairstyles that "create problems of health
and sanitation, obstruct vision, or call undue attention to the athlete." It also lets coaches
set more specific guidelines, as head varsity coach Stacy Meyer did. According to the
lawsuit, Meyer wanted both the high school and junior high teams to have a "clean-cut"
image and that the haircut guidelines created a sense of uniformity for the teams.
Other coaches weigh in
Some Indianapolis-area basketball teams have hairstyle guidelines for similar reasons,
but coaches say they haven't had problems with enforcement and wouldn't necessarily
remove players from the team if they broke those rules.
Mark James, who has been head boys basketball coach at Franklin Central High School
for 26 years, requires his players to keep their hair above their collars and out of their
eyes. He also tells players their sideburns can't go below their ears. James said he
wouldn't kick players off the team for violating his haircut policy, but he might not play
them as much, mostly because they would be ignoring team rules.
Jack Keefer, who has coached at Lawrence North High School for 35 years, said he
doesn't have a specific haircut policy, but his players know their hair needs to be short if
they want to play during games. "I always tell the kids, 'The longer the hair, the slower
you look,' and I don't play slow people," Keefer said. "If hair's more important than
being on the team, you've got a player and a parent with their priorities in the wrong
place."
But some schools aren't as strict. Coaches at Ben Davis High School don't have many
guidelines about grooming, athletic director Kevin Britt said. As long as a students' hair
is clean and doesn't jeopardize anyone's safety, they allow students to participate in
sports. "We forgo the clean-cut look to complete our main mission," Britt said, "which
is to have kids involved in extracurricular activities."
Still, Hopkins said he doesn't think Greensburg Schools officials would change their
philosophy, even with a lawsuit pending. "I don't see this school district agreeing that
this child join a team without having to cut his hair."
Ritchie, C. Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
IndyStar, Jan. 3, 2011. Available at: indystar.com
Notes on my thoughts,
reactions and questions as I
read:
Vale Middle School Reading Article
Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
1. Using the chart provided, list four details from the article in support of the school and four details in
support of the student.
SCHOOL
STUDENT
2. The title of the article and the first subtitle each use a pun. What is a pun? Explain the puns and the
author’s purpose in using them.
Vale Middle School Reading Article
Lawsuit Over Greensburg Short-Hair Rule May Be a Long Shot
3. Based on the information in the article, how do you think the court will rule in this case? Explain fully.
4. Explain this statement from the article, "This is classic David versus Goliath, and they want their son to
understand that." What does this mean? Do you agree with the student or the school? Explain.
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