The Dardanelle Public School District and its officials, as individuals, appeal the judgment of the district court, 1 sitting without a jury, that the school district impermissibly failed to renew the contract of appellee, Nancy Cox, in retaliation for speech and conduct protected by the first amendment, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982). The appellants contend that the district court improperly concluded that appellee’s activities were protected by the first amendment. They further contend that the district court erred in finding that the protected activities in which the appe, lee engaged were the motivating factor in the decision not to renew her teaching contract, and that but for her protected speech, she would have been rehired. The appellants also contend that the district court erred in finding that the district school board did not comply with statutory procedures governing the non-retention of public schoоl teachers. We affirm the judgment of the district court. 2
Appellee Nancy Cox was first hired by the Dardanelle Public School District to teach eighth grade English at the district’s Middle School for the 1976-77 school year. Her employment contract was renewed by the School Board each of the following two years. During the first two years Cox taught at the Middle School, she established a good working relationship with the principal, Ed Bradshaw, who served as her immediate supervisor. Bradshаw gave Cox good evaluations and recommended each year that she be rehired.
At the beginning of the 1979-80 school year, the third year Cox was employed by the School District, appellant John Dillard replaced Ed Bradshaw as principal of the Middle School. During this same school year Cox became more active in the teachers local organization, the Dardanelle Education Association (DEA), and was appointed DEA representative to the Middle School for the 1979-80 school year.
The difficulties between Cox and Dillard were best illustrated by the following factual findings of the district court:
4. Defendant Johnny L. Dillard replaced Ed Bradshaw as Principal of the Dardanelle Middle School before the beginning of the 1979-80 school term. Defendant Dillard implemented several changes in the regulations under which the teachers had performed their duties in previous years. Plaintiff, along with a majority of the other members of the fаculty of the Dardanelle Middle School, *671 Upper Building, disagreed with some of defendant Dillard’s methods.
5. Plaintiff on numerous occasions spoke out concerning the administration of the educational process at the Dardanelle Middle School, oftentimes in disagreement with defendant Dillard. On November 6,1979, plaintiff, along with a number of the other faculty members of her school, caused a grievance to be filed with defendant Dillard concerning the educational process in their school. In that grievance, the teachers requested defendant Dillard to meet with them to discuss their dissatisfaction with the educational process then existing. Defendant Dillard instructed the teachers to file individual grievances if they wished to have their concerns addressed by him. Three teachers, Richard Johnson, Maxine Kemp and plaintiff, submitted individual grievances reflecting their names thereon to defendant Dillard. All three of the teachers submitting individual grievances were the victims of job-related sanctions from all the defendants herein. Richard Johnson was terminated in February, 1980, plaintiff was dismissed at the conclusion of the 1979-80 school term, and Maxine Kemp was placed on a probationary status for the 1980-81 school term. None of the other members of the Dardanelle Middle School Upper Building faculty suffered any job-related sanctions during or at the conclusion of the 1979-80 school term.
7. Plaintiff was informed by defendant Fugatt by lettеr received on or about February 29, 1980, that he was recommending to the Board of Education that her contract not be renewed for the coming school term. Later, on April 1, 1980, plaintiff received a letter from the President of the School Board specifying eleven (11) grounds for the Superintendent’s nonrenewal recommendation. A hearing was held before the School Board on April 16 and 23, 1980, to consider the matter of the nonrenewal recommendation аs to plaintiff’s employment. After hearing considerable evidence from defendants Fugatt and Dillard, as well as plaintiff and other witnesses, the School Board voted on each of the grounds listed by the Board President in his letter to plaintiff and relied upon by defendant Fugatt. Of those eleven (11) charges, the Board voted that four (4) were false, that four (4) were true but not sufficient grounds for nonrenewal, noted that one (1) had been withdrawn by the Board’s attorney, and voted that two (2) were truе and constituted sufficient grounds relied upon by the Board in dismissing plaintiff were “(1) on August 30, August 31, September 4, September 7, and September 10, Mrs. Cox refused to follow directions in that she signed in for Mr. Johnson.”, and “(2) on February 15, Mrs. Cox refused to follow administrative policy in that she allowed her class to be interrupted by a visitor without permission from the Principal.”
Cox v. Dardanelle Public School District, No. LR-C-80-441, slip op. at 2-4, (E.D.Ark. April 23, 1984).
The district court found that the appellants had dismissed Cox not for alleged insubordination in failing to comply with administrative directives, but because of her continued expressions of disagreement over the educational policies in force in thé Middle School. 3 The district court also found that the grounds advanced by the appellants for Cox’s renewal were “pretextual and insignificant,” Cox, slip op. at 4, and further, that but for her criticisms, Cox’s contract would have been renewed by the School Board. The court also concluded as a matter of law that Cox’s expressions were protected by the first amendment. The court thereupon awarded *672 Cox damages for the wrongful dismissal. The appellants filed the instant appeal.
Claims by public employees that they have suffered job-related sanctions as a result of speech are considered in accordance with the now familiar analysis set out by the Supreme Court in
Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle,
A.
Whether a publiс employee’s expressions are constitutionally protected involves a two-step inquiry.
Connick v. Myers,
The district court concluded that Cox’s speech, for the most part, was an “expression of her own ideas concerning the educational process in the Dardanelle Middle School ...,” Cox, slip op. at 4, and therefore related to a matter of public import. Appellants contend that this conclusion is wrong as a matter of law 4 and that aрpellant’s expressions amounted to no more than her “personal objections to employee work rules,” Brief of Appellants at 16, and thus, as expressions of private and not public concern, are not entitled to constitutional protection.
Whether a public employee’s expressions relate to a matter of public concern must be considered in light of the “content, form, and context of a given statement, as revealed by the whole record.”
Connick,
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Our review of the record convinces us that Cox’s speech was composed of more than criticisms of internal personnel policies, but touched on matters of public concern, and was therefore entitled to constitutional protection. To begin with, not all of Cox’s speech was directed at Dillard’s personnel policies. The very first dispute between Cox and Dillard related to the District’s decision to abandon ability grouping of students. The educational theories and practices employed by school administrators is clearly a question of public concern. The questions how we teach the young, what we teach them, and the environment in which we teach them are of the most central concern to every community in the nation.
Cf. Board of Education v. Pico,
Additionally, we believe that much of Cox’s speech directed at the school’s personnel policies was not motivated solely by employment concerns, but was legitimate criticism of policies and administration which affected the educational function of the school.
6
Cox was critical in her individual grievance, and by proxy, in the general grievance, of the manner in which Dillard dealt with the faculty, and expressed the view that Dillard’s administrative style had discouraged teacher input, inhibited teachers’ use of different teaching techniques and classroom methods, significantly affected teacher morale at the school, and affected the students. Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2; Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3. Cox’s statements on these matters were not the comments of a single employee bearing on issues unique to that employee.
Cf. Connick,
We therefore conclude that a significant portion of Cox’s speech was of public concern. We must now balance appellee’s interest in advancing these expressions with the state’s legitimate interest in the “effective and efficient fulfillment of its rеsponsibilities to the public.”
Connick,
An employee’s interest in freely commenting on matters of public concern must generally give way to the state’s interest in efficiently fulfilling its responsibilities where the employee’s speech significantly impairs her ability to perform her duties, disrupts working relationships and harmony among co-workers, or otherwise
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impedes the normal operations of the institution.
McGee v. South Pemiscot School District R-V,
There is nо evidence that Cox’s criticisms throughout the year introduced discord into otherwise harmonious relations with her colleagues. To the contrary, the evidence indicates that this dispute was between a majority of the teachers at the Middle School and the principal. Moreover, there is no evidence that Cox’s speech affected her teaching performance.
8
Nor is there evidence that Cox willfully disobeyed any directive that affected her teaching duties.
Cf. Patterson v. Masem,
Nor do we believe that any statements by Cox can fairly be said to have disrupted her relationship with Dillard. The evidence indicatеs that the primary source of the disruption in their relationship (indeed, the cause of disruption of the relationship between a majority of the faculty and Dillard), was Dillard’s implementation and enforcement of the personnel policies, not Cox’s speech.
See Monsanto v. Quinn,
Finally, there is no allegation that the time, place or manner of appellee’s speech aggravated her relationship with Dillard or impeded the normal operation of the school. Cox did not attempt to circumvent the chain of command,
see Foster v. Ripley,
B.
The appellants аrgue that even if Cox’s speech, on balance, was constitutionally protected, it was not the motivating factor in the Board’s decision not to renew her contract. They contend that the Board’s decision was based on Cox’s repeated refusal to comply with proper administrative directives, not her criticism of those directives.
A public employee generally can be discharged for refusing to follow administrative policies and directives, еven those they contend are misguided.
See Nicholson,
Whether the protected conduct of the plaintiff was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse employment decision is question of fact,
Roberts,
Wе believe that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the district court’s finding that Cox’s speech motivated the Board not to renew her contract. Dillard admitted that Cox’s individual grievance likely was a factor in subsequent decisions he made regarding her employment. At least three memoranda Dillard placed in Cox’s personnel file, describing actions of Cox which he believed violated administrative policies or were improper, made reference to the grievance and suggested in each case that Cox’s actions were not consistent with the criticisms she had levied against him in the grievance. See Joint Exhibit of Parties at 174, 175, 183. Furthermore, the district court took explicit notice of the fact that only the three teachers who filed individual grievances were subject that year to job-related sanctions. Cox, slip op. at 2. The district court’s decision is not clearly erroneous. 9
C.
The appellants also аrgue that the district court erred in finding that the teachers did not successfully discharge the burden of demonstrating by a preponderance of the evidence that the School Board would have reached the same decision but for Cox’s protected conduct.
Cf. Mt. Healthy City Board of Education,
There is ample evidence to sustain the district court’s finding. The appellants of
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fer no reasons other than those advanced by Dillard and Fugatt and considered by the School Board to justify the employment decision. The School Board found only two of the eleven preferred charges. sufficient for adverse action, and the district court concluded that these two were mere pretexts and too insignificant to support the allegations.
Cf. Monsanto,
We also reject appellants’ argument that because the School Board members were unaware of Cox’s grievance and other criticisms of Dillard’s policies, their decision not to renew Cox’s contract was not tainted by any impermissible motive. The district court could reasonably conclude that the Board would not have considered an adverse action against Cox had Dillard and Fugatt not advanced these retaliatory charges.
See Professional Association of College Educators,
Notes
. The Honorable George Howard, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Our decision on the appellee’s first amendment claim makes it unnecessary for us to consider her pendant state procedural claim.
. The district court found that Cox was fired as well because of her association with a fellow teacher, Riсhard Johnson. Our decision that Cox’s expressions were protected conduct, and the sole reason for the nonrenewal of her contract, make it unnecessary for us to review this alternative ground. We note that the parties in the briefs filed with this court mention Cox’s association with Johnson only in passing, and direct their constitutional arguments solely to Cox’s speech claim.
. “The inquiry into the protected status of speech is one of law, not fact.”
Connick,
. It is clear thаt an employee’s right to speak out on matters of public concern is not forfeited by the choice of a private forum.
Givhan v. Western Consolidated School District,
.
Cox’s criticism of the policies requiring teachers to sign in and out and forbidding personal use of the office phones, and her criticism regarding the timing of announcements and messages during the day all bear on internal matters relevant only to the employees of the school, and are not constitutionally protected.
Cf. Knapp v. Whitaker,
. The Court in
Connick
did not hold that criticism of the way in which one’s superior administers the office or institution is always solely a question of internal concern. As Justice Brennan noted in dissent, "It is beyond doubt that personnel decisions that adversely affect discipline and morale may ultimately impair an agency’s efficient performance of its duties," and comment on these decisions, therefore, is a matter of public concern as "of interest to persons seeking to develop informed opinions about the manner in which * * * an * * * official charged with managing a vital governmental agency[ ] discharges his responsibilities."
. The appellees have not suggested that Cox brought her criticism of Dillard’s policies into the classrоom. We recognize that a number of the grounds advanced by Dillard and Fugatt for the decision not. to renew Cox’s contract suggest that Cox’s teaching was below acceptable standards. However, there is no suggestion that these putative shortcomings were connected to her protected speech. Furthermore, the School Board found all but one of these charges to be either false or an insufficient ground for nonrenewal, and the district court found these grounds to be pretexts.
. We note, moreover, that neither violation of the administrative policies appears to have been intended as deliberate insubordination. We do not intend to imply that public employees can be sanctioned only for purposeful violations of the rules. However, the rather insignificant nature of the charges here lends support to the district court’s finding that the decision not to renew Cox’s contract was based not on her performance as a teacher, but upon her conduct and complaints.
Cf. Monsanto,
. A different case might be presented if the employer could show that the decisionmaker was uninfluenced by a recommendation or charges brought by an impermissibly motivated person.
See Professional Association of College Educators,
