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What Happens At School Expulsion Hearings?


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Last Updated on October 30, 2024 by Michelle Ball

By Michelle Ball, Sacramento California Expulsion, Special Education, sports/CIF, College, Education and School Attorney/Lawyer for Students since 1995

School expulsions are terrifying for parents. But what actually happens at student expulsion hearings? Let’s demystify the mysterious school expulsion hearing. Hopefully this helps some parents get through it.

Teen female in front of mirror
Teens can do silly things and be placed up for expulsion.

There Will Be Differences in Expulsion Hearings, Depending

There will be some minor variations in student expulsion hearing processes, depending on the school district.

Discipline hearings may also appear different depending on who hears the expulsion: an expulsion panel, a single hearing officer, or the full school board.

And, they vary depending on how well school districts follow various laws, of course!

Waiting For School Expulsion Hearing to Begin

First is the waiting game. On the day of the expulsion hearing, parents and the student arrive outside a hearing room, check in and wait. Or, they just walk into the hearing room and sit down.

Any witnesses the family brings with them, or meets there, will be asked to wait outside.

This is the easy part.

Hearing Officer Reads Basic Student Expulsion Hearing Rules

Once everyone is seated and tension is highest, the hearing officer will begin the hearing, reading off the procedural and other rules. Likely the expulsion hearing officer will indicate the hearing is being recorded (or a court reporter is present).

Any anticipated procedural issues can be brought up at this time, such as issues with anticipated witnesses or an objection to some evidence coming in. However, traditional evidentiary rules do not apply.

Black mom looking concerned at phone
Parents can go into an expulsion hearing, knowing what is going to happen.

Who Goes First?

The school will present their case first.

Opening Statements by School and Parent

The school will make their opening statement. Sometimes this is just reading the school summary already provided to the parents.

Other times, it is a new summary that the Principal or Vice Principal makes, where they lay out the alleged facts and their request for expulsion.

The parent usually gets to make an opening statement now as well. Occasionally, the parent’s opening may come later, when the parent presents the student’s expulsion defense.

School Makes Their Expulsion Case

The school then presents their case.

If the parents don’t have the school’s expulsion hearing documents by now, they need to ask for them. Anything the school is presenting should be shared with the student’s family.

The school will likely refer to their packet and read some of that into the record.

They may call witnesses. Witnesses will likely include an administrator, and sometimes a student or teacher witness.

If the school calls the accused student, the family can refuse, and/or can reserve the student’s testimony for their defense. Remember, the student cannot be compelled to testify in an expulsion hearing.

Teen male smirking, photo, white with brown hair
Expulsion can be a black mark in a student’s records.

Questions from the Expulsion Panel or Parent

During testimony and/or after the presentation by the school, the expulsion panel and parent may ask questions at appropriate times.

Student’s Family Presents Expulsion Hearing Defense

The student’s family goes next. If they did not do an opening statement earlier, they can do it now. Otherwise, parents can refer to any documents they submitted and call their witnesses, if any.

A parent will likely testify as a character witness. It is up to the parent whether the student will testify or not.

More Questions from the Student Expulsion Hearing Panel

At appropriate times during the parent’s witnesses testimony, or after they student’s expulsion defense is done, the school or expulsion hearing panel may ask questions. If the student testifies, there are likely to be clarifying questions.

Maybe There Will Be Closing Expulsion Arguments

Usually there is a closing argument allowed for both sides. Sometimes a hearing officer tries to just jump to deliberations.

I always ask to do a closing argument so I can try one more time to persuade the school expulsion panel that the student is innocent or deserves mercy.

This is also a good time to attack the holes in the school’s case, or point out areas where a charge was not proven by the school. Parents can ask that no student expulsion proceed or that a lesser punishment be imposed on the student.

Summary of Post-Expulsion Hearing Steps

Young boy graphic going from sad to happy
If a parent is effective, punishment may be lessened for the student at an expulsion hearing.

The expulsion hearing officer should now explain what will happen next, how long the decision may take to issue, and any remaining procedural steps.

The family can ask any final questions. The student’s expulsion hearing is then closed.

Dismissed While School Expulsion Panel Deliberates

Both parties and any administrative staff should all leave the room. Usually the expulsion panel will remain in the hearing room to start their deliberations.

If a parent does a good job, hopefully the student’s expulsion will not proceed or an alternative will be imposed.


Michelle Ball has helped students as an education attorney since 1995. As a student-focused lawyer, located in the capitol of California, Sacramento, she can reach across California to assist. She helps in Roseville, Rocklin, Fresno, Los Angeles, Napa, and many more California locations.

Suggested reading: Is School Expulsion Really That Bad?