Searching students and confiscating items - Community Law (2024)

Discipline and rules

In limited situations, teachers and authorised staff members can:

  • get you to hand over an item and confiscate it
  • search your clothing, bags and other containers (like a lunchbox or pencil case)

Teachers must have “reasonable grounds” to search you (see below).

Teachers and staff are given these powers by the Education and Training Act.

Can my teacher make me hand over something that belongs to me, like my phone?

Education and Training Act 2020, ss 106

A teacher can make you hand over an item if they believe (on “reasonable grounds”) that you have something that is likely to:

  • endanger someone’s safety, or
  • have a negative or disruptive effect on the school’s learning environment.
  • The teacher can only do this if:
  • you have the item in clear view, or
  • they think (for a good reason) you’re hiding it in your pockets or somewhere else on you, or in a bag or container.

If the item (like a picture) is on your computer or phone, the teacher can get you to show them the item or get you to hand over the device.

The teacher can’t search you directly, or use any physical force. If you refuse to hand over the item, the school can take reasonable disciplinary steps.

Can a teacher search my clothing and bags?

Education and Training Act 2020, s 107

Only if they think (on reasonable grounds) that you have something harmful. If you refuse to hand it over when asked, the teacher can require you to:

  • take off any outer clothing you’re wearing (including a coat, jacket, jumper or cardigan)
  • take off your shoes and socks (but not tights or stockings)
  • hand over the bag or other container.
  • The teacher can then search the clothing, footwear, bag or container. The teacher can’t search any clothing while you’re still wearing it.

They have to immediately return your clothing, footwear, bag or container to you, even if they find something.

If you don’t remove outer clothing or hand over your bag, the school can discipline you.

An item is considered “harmful” if it is an immediate threat to anyone’s safety (including their emotional safety).

What does “reasonable grounds” mean?

A teacher or authorised staff member must have a proper reason to believe that you have something harmful before they can search you. They don’t need to be absolutely sure.

What’s reasonable will depend on the situation, and on the type of item the teacher thinks you have.

For example, reasonable grounds can be based on information from other students. However, it wouldn’t be reasonable for a teacher to make assumptions based on what you’ve done in the past. Even if they’ve found a harmful item on you before, they can’t use this as grounds for searching your clothes if they have no other reason to.

Can the school strip-search me?

Education and Training Act 2020, s 107

No. You can be asked to remove your outer clothing (for example a hoodie) or to hand over a bag (see above).

Can a school do blanket searches of whole classes or groups of students?

Education and Training Act 2020, ss 106, 107

No, teachers can’t do blanket searches. A blanket search is when, for example, everyone in the class or year group is searched to find an item.

For a teacher to be able to use the power to search students’ outer clothing or bags for harmful items, the teacher would need to have “reasonable grounds” to believe that each student had a harmful item. For example, if something has apparently been stolen, the school can’t do a blanket search (even for a harmful item).

Can my school search my desk or locker?

Yes. A school can search its own property at any time for any reason. This includes lockers and desks given to you for storage, like lockers and desks.

The terms and conditions about the use of lockers should state that the school can search your locker and any bag or container in it.

This doesn’t mean that a school can search your bag whenever you leave it somewhere like a hook in the changing room during PE class. Your bag can only be searched if a teacher reasonably believes it contains a harmful item.

If you don’t want your school to be able to search your bag at any time, it’s best not to leave it unattended in a school-provided storage area.

My school has a policy that says students and their property can be searched at any time by school staff – is this legal?

No. Teachers and authorised staff can only search you if they follow the laws in the Education and Training Act. See “Can my teacher make me hand over something that belongs to me, like my phone?” above

You can’t be asked to give your consent to something that’s outside those powers (like a strip search). However, if you freely volunteer to empty your bag (for example, because you’re keen to prove you’re innocent), then that’s fine.

The school might say that by being enrolled at the school, you and your parents or guardians have agreed to this policy. This is incorrect because schools can’t adopt policies that go against New Zealand law.

Police search powers

Search and Surveillance Act 2012, s 22

The laws on searches and confiscations in schools don’t affect the powers that the police have to search you. If you have something harmful, like a knife, the school can involve the police and supervise you until they arrive.

If you leave schools grounds in the meantime, the school can discipline you and you’ll be considered “truant” (wagging school).

The police can carry out searches if they follow the law, and it is reasonable to search you. This will depend on the circ*mstances. The police can’t carry out “blanket searches” of whole groups or classes of students.

The police usually need your consent to search you, but can search you without your consent if they think you have a controlled drug (e.g. cannabis or MDMA).

If you think a search was carried out by the police roughly or without good reason, you should complain to the Independent Police Conduct Authority – go to www.ipca.govt.nz/Site/complaints

For more information, see “Search powers: When the police can search you, your home or your things” in the Community Law Manual

Can the school call in drug-sniffing dogs to do a general search for drugs?

Education and Training Act 2020, s 110

Yes, the school can bring in dogs to search desks, lockers and other school property. The school can’t use dogs to search you personally.

The police can use drug-sniffing dogs to search students if they have a reasonable suspicion that there are drugs involved, or if they have a search warrant issued by a court.

Can a school drug-test students?

Education and Training Act 2020, s 81

Random drug testing of students isn’t allowed.

If you’ve been suspended, the school board can place “reasonable conditions” on you when you return to school. This can include getting you to participate in a drug treatment programme that includes testing for drugs.

Students can also freely agree to be tested for drugs.

Searching students and confiscating items - Community Law (2024)

FAQs

Does the 4th Amendment protect public school students from searches? ›

The Supreme Court of the United States held that yes, students do have a right to be safe from unreasonable searches and seizures even when they are within the confines of the school building.

Under what conditions may a school official search a student's locker? ›

If your locker is considered personal property, then your school may not search your locker unless it has a “reasonable suspicion” that it may find something against the law or school rules. But if your locker is considered school property, then your locker can be searched.

What legal principles define school officials' authority to search students? ›

The Fourth Amendment applies to searches conducted by public school officials because “school officials act as representatives of the State, not merely as surrogates for the parents.” 350 However, “the school setting requires some easing of the restrictions to which searches by public authorities are ordinarily subject ...

Should our school allow unannounced searches of student property to deter the sale and distribution of illegal substances? ›

YES. But these random searches must be based on special, school-wide needs such as ensuring school safety and should be truly random. A random search cannot be used to target any individual student.

What is the exclusionary rule in school searches? ›

The exclusionary rule is a legal principle that prohibits the use of evidence that was obtained in violation of a person's constitutional rights. If a school search is found to be unlawful or in violation of a student's Fourth Amendment rights, the evidence obtained during the search may be suppressed.

What is an example of an unreasonable search and seizure? ›

For example, if they had a warrant to search your car they could not also search your home. However, they can search outside the scope of the warrant and seize other items if they are in plain view. They can also act to prevent the destruction of evidence.

What searches can be done on students? ›

Normally a search requires probable cause, but in a school setting a search is constitutional if it is reasonable. A school may conduct a general or random search of the entire student body if, based on a review of all of the circ*mstances surrounding its suspicion, the search is reasonable.

Does a student have a constitutional right of privacy? ›

The United States District Court for the Central District of California issued a ruling that students have a protected privacy right under the California Constitution and they do not waive their reasonable expectation of privacy simply because they are out in one context, but not in another.

Why is it constitutional for school administrators to search the lockers of students without a warrant? ›

Thank you, Fourth Amendment! However, while in school, students aren't guaranteed all the protections that the Constitution gives us. One of these protections that is limited is the right to privacy. So schools are not required to get a warrant before searching a student's belongings.

What are the violations of the 4th 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 issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things ...

What are suspicionless searches? ›

Suspicionless searches are searches conducted by law enforcement officials without any individualized suspicion of wrongdoing. These types of searches are often conducted in situations where there is a perceived threat to public safety or national security.

Can teachers say no to the bathroom? ›

Bathroom rights might be something one just assumes, but according to California law, there are no guidelines that decide whether teachers must allow bathroom usage, and CHS has a lack of a general policy on whether a student can leave the classroom to use the restroom.

What are the rights of the Fourth Amendment in schools? ›

The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution guarantees the right of everyone “to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” This means that if the government (and government institutions like public schools) wants to search your belongings, or take them away from ...

Should teachers and administrators be allowed to search lockers of students? ›

School admin- istrators should only be able to search a students' locker when they have a reasonable suspicion of the student's wrongdoing.

Which of the following is true about school searches? ›

Final answer: School searches require reasonable suspicion, not a warrant from a judge, due to the decision in the Supreme Court case New Jersey v. T.L.O. This adjusts the standard from probable cause to reasonable suspicion specifically in the school setting.

Does the 4th Amendment apply to students in school? ›

According to the California Supreme Court, a student may be detained even by a school security officer, as long as the detention is not arbitrary, capricious, or for the purpose of harassment. This was the court's holding in In re Randy G. (2001) 26 Cal. 4th 556.

Does the Fourth Amendment apply to students? ›

Reasonable Suspicion

In 1985, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that the Fourth Amendment applies to students in the public schools (New Jersey v. T.L.O., 1985). The Court concluded, however, that the school environment requires an easing of the restriction to which searches by public authorities are normally subject.

What is the 4th Amendment in the classroom? ›

The Fourth Amendment protects us from unreasonable search and seizures of our person, our house, our papers, and our effects. In many cases, this amendment governs our interactions with the police. Before the government—including police officers—can search your home or seize your property, it needs a good reason.

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