Facts
Procedural History
Court's Rationale
Holding
Wild Card
100

Who was Joseph Kennedy?

Plaintiff, coach

100

What court first heard the case?

U.S. District Court

100

Did the Court find Kennedy's speech private or government speech?

Private speech

100

Did Kennedy eventually win or lose?

He won

100

What powers do the Executive branch have?

Shared and Domestic powers

200

What did Kennedy do after the games

He knelt and prayed on the field

200

Which circuit could heard the appeal?

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals

200

Why did the Court say the policy was not neutral?

It specifically targeted religious conduct while allowing comparable secular activities

200

What did the Court decide about the school's actions?

They violated Kennedy's First Amendment rights

200

How many Amendments are there in the Bill of Rights?

27

300

Why did the school district discipline Kennedy?

They feared his prayers could be seen as school endorsement of religion, violating the Establishment Clause 

300

Who won at the Ninth Circuit?

The Bremerton School District

300

What did the Court say about the Establishment Clause conflict?

There was no real conflict; the Clauses are complementary

300

What was the main reason for the Court's holding?

The district's policy was neither neutral nor generally applicable 

300

Foreign individuals likely would be considered to have few freedoms under the Bill of Rights because they are not U.S. citizens and not parties to the "social compact"

Which theory is this?

Compact Theory

400

When did Kennedy start his prayers? Year

2008

400

What did the Supreme Court do?

Reversed the Ninth Circuit's decision and ruled in favor of Kennedy

400

What approach did the Court say should guide Establishment Clause cases?

Historical practices and original meaning, not the Lemon test

400

What did the dissent warn about the decision?

It weakened the separation of church and state and ignored student coercion risks

400
A state government prohibits any protests regarding anti-gun rights in fronts of jails and prisons


Public or Non-public? Describe why 

Non-public

Criteria:Viewpoint, Legitimate governmental purpose

Prohibition Constitutional: Most likely no; prohibits one specific viewpoint on guns=anti-guns;government's interest: security concerns  

500

How did the students become involved in Kennedy's prayers?

They voluntarily joined him over time, Kennedy told them participation was optional(!!)

500

What was the final outcome for Kennedy?

He was entitled to summary judgment, and the school district violated his First Amendment rights

500

What did the Court say about respect for religious expressions?

They are indispensable in a free society and protected unless coercive 

500

How might this case affect future school policies on religious expression?

Schools must allow private religious expression by staff unless it coerces students

500

What are four Types of Speech? 

Offensive

Hate

Defamatory

Fighting Words