I believe that students should have a system that is similar to court. If a student has a case that meets certain criteria, they can go in front of staff or student council (with supervision) and advocate for themselves. I think it would be cool to otherwise have real courts reserve a room at certain times where students can come in for their case, and this would benefit the real system by providing student lawyers or judges with experience and providing students with job shadows.
This is mostly for high school but can apply to colleges. Because of drama, policies, funding and other things, this would need a lot of tweaking in order to work in the real world. But we could heavily reduce problems that plague the system on a limited budget, with the benefit of teaching students how to properly advocate for themselves and solve problems and understand other people. This can work well with a school currency system which I already believe has many benefits on its own.
Students can defend themselves in accusations, request accommodations case by case, apply for restraining orders with proper rapport etc. Students who have done something wrong will directly face their actions in a way that affects them (could be academic depletion, currency/privilege loss or probation and discipline) rather than a standard one size fits all protocol where the school makes them sit in the office, maybe calls a parent or sends them home/to detention.
In a case where an actual crime such as abuse or vandalism is happening, the system will already be one or multiple steps ahead in escalating to the proper measures and will be ahead in other concerns like keeping other kids safe. This is already applicable since standard schools have monitoring or cameras. Most of it can be handled all in one place (in the case of real court). With the changes in society nowadays that no one can seem to get a hold on due to so many factors, I think teaching young people the importance of court and law and civility would decrease the amount of real world crime.
I feel like in general, this would give teenagers and young adults more room to be treated like adults and that will in turn improve behavior and school ethics and subordination, on top of naturally reducing cases of bullying, academic dishonesty, and theft, the list goes on. Students can learn how the legal system works in the process, which is something that seems to confuse a lot of people who are fresh into adulthood.
There are so many cases where things aren't going well at home or at school for kids, and the case isn't extreme enough for government intervention or the system that already exists doesn't have the right automatic protocol. Less kids would meet a deadend if they were to go to a court designated for them and say, for example, “I'm working to support my siblings while trying to finish school, and I need accommodations or fee leniency” or “I have medical absences that the administration isn't accepting and if I am suspended, it will affect my transcript”. Kids can request help on a unique case by case scenario rather than us having No Student Left Behind and other implementations, which are extremely controversial for good reasons. Kids who deal with health problems or reasonable absences can make agreements on scheduling etc instead of just having a ton of late work piled onto them due by the end of the week or being dumped into a summer class that doesn't help, with everyone else.
If a school has a policy or punishment that is subjectively or totally questionable, such as detention or fees, a student could take their case to a staff member or school court. Things like attendance problems are extremely subjective, and while I know things like attendance policies are typically quota based, a court would give students a chance to avoid undeserved consequences (especially suspension or grade reductions). Students could make a case to get help in a certain situation.
If there's a case of harassment or property damage or there's an event that lies on the threshold of a policy, and also in the case where there's an accusation of serious behavior, the students can advocate for themselves. Teachers would have a much harder time getting away with accusing students of things like cheating, or abusing their power or having discrimination against students. This would be more effective than a no-tolerance policy because students could have a real case against another student/staff who is hurting them and students and staff would ideally be less inclined to the behaviors, knowing they will indeed have consequences or will be monitored. The fault wouldn't be a simple report where the head of the school decides to just brush it off or a comment to a counselor that gets lost in the day to day work.
Submitted March 24, 2026 at 03:22AM by TUD-13BarryAllen https://ift.tt/dHYsJTN
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