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process requires notice and a hearing prior to suspension for ten days or less. A hearing consists in
giving the student “an opportunity to explain his/her version of the facts.”
The court stopped short of requiring more extensive due process protections—right to counsel,
confronting and cross examining witnesses, and compulsory process for witnesses—in suspensions of
ten days or less. The court recognized that requiring extensive due process protections in short-term
suspensions would overwhelm the resources of the schools. Providing students and their parents with
notice and an informal hearing to tell their version of the incident “will provide a meaningful hedge
against erroneous action.” The court further noted that more extensive due process requirements are
required in long-term suspensions.
7.
Significance: Goss established that due process is required before students may be
suspended for ten days or less. The nature of the due process required will depend upon the severity of
the consequences for the students. In general, suspensions, of ten days or less, require notice and an
opportunity to be heard. Longer suspensions usually require a formal hearing with the opportunity to
present witness, the opportunity to subpoena witness, the opportunity to confront witnesses, and the
right to counsel.
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