The plaintiffs are two minors and their parents. The minors allege that they were compelled to attend an indecent AIDS and sex education program conducted at their public high school by defendant Hot, Sexy and Safer Productions (“Hot, Sexy, and Safer”). Plaintiffs allege, inter alia, that the compelled attendance deprived the minors of their privacy rights and their right to an educational environment free from sexual harassment. The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs are Chelmsford High School students Jason P. Mesiti (“Mesiti”) and Shannon Silva (“Silva”), and their parents Ronald and Suzanne Brown (“the Browns”), and Carol and Richard Dubreuil (“the Du-breuils”). The plaintiffs’ complaint alleges the following facts, which we take as true for purposes of this appeal. On April 8, 1992, Mesiti and Silva attended a mandatory, school-wide “assembly” at Chelmsford High School. Both students were fifteen years old at the time. The assembly consisted of a ninety-minute presentation characterized by the defendants as an AIDS awareness program (the “Program”). The Program was staged by defendant Suzi Landolphi (“Lan-dolphi”), contracting through defendant Hot, Sexy, and Safer, Inc., a corporation wholly owned by Landolphi.
Plaintiffs allege that Landolphi gave sexually explicit monologues and participated in sexually suggestive skits with several minors chosen from the audience. Specifically, the complaint alleges that Landolphi: 1) told the students that they were going to have a “group sexual experience, with audience participation”; 2) used profane, lewd, and lascivious language to describe body parts and excretory functions; 8) advocated and approved oral sex, masturbation, homosexual sexual activity, and condom use during promiscuous premarital sex; 4) simulated masturbation; 5) characterized the loose pants worn by one minor as “erection wear”; 6) referred to being in “deep sh — ” after anal sex; 7) had a male minor lick an oversized condom with her, after which she had a female minor pull it over the male minor’s entire head and blow it up; 8) encouraged a male minor to display his “orgasm face” with her for the camera; 9) informed a male minor that he was not having enough orgasms; 10) closely inspected a minor and told him he had a “nice butt”; and 11) made eighteen references to orgasms, six references to male genitals, and eight references to female genitals.
Plaintiffs maintain that the sexually explicit nature of Landolphi’s speech and behavior humiliated and intimidated Mesiti and Silva. Moreover, many students copied Landolphi’s routines and generally displayed overtly sexual behavior in the weeks following the Program, allegedly exacerbating the minors’ harassment. The complaint does not allege that either of the minor plaintiffs actually participated in any of the skits, or were the direct objects of any of Landolphi’s comments.
The complaint names eight co-defendants along with Hot, Sexy, and Safer, and Landol-phi, alleging that each played some role in planning, sponsoring, producing, and compelling the minor plaintiffs’ attendance at the Program. In March 1992, defendant Judith Hass (“Hass”), then chairperson of the Chelmsford Parent Teacher Organization (the “PTO”), initiated negotiations with Hot, Sexy, and Safer. Hass and defendant Michael Gilchrist, M.D., also a member of the PTO, as well as the school physician, viewed a promotional videotape of segments of Lan-dolphi’s past performances and then recommended the Program to the school administration. On behalf of defendant Chelmsford School Committee (the “School Committee”), Hass executed an agreement with Hot, Sexy, and Safer, and authorized the release of $1,000 of Chelmsford school funds to pay Landolphi’s fee.
The complaint also names as defendants two other members of the School Committee, *530 Wendy Marcks and Mary E. Frantz, as well as the Superintendent and Assistant Superintendent of the Chelmsford Public Schools, Richard H. Moser, and David S. Troughton, and the Principal of Chelmsford High School, George J. Betses. Plaintiffs allege that all the defendants participated in the decisions to hire Landolphi, and to compel the students to attend the Program. All the defendants were physically present during the Program.
A school policy adopted by the School Committee required “[p]ositive subscription, with written parental permission” as a prerequisite to “instruction in human sexuality.” The plaintiffs allege, however, that the parents were not given advance notice of the content of the Program or an opportunity to excuse their children from attendance at the assembly.
The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, and also dismissed the state law claims under the supplemental jurisdiction principles of 28 U.S.C. § 1367. 1 The district court deferred entry of final judgment, giving plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint curative of the deficiencies by February 10, 1995. Plaintiffs failed to do so, and final judgment was entered on March 3, 1995, dismissing their claims.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We exercise
de novo
review over a district court’s dismissal of a claim under Rule 12(b)(6).
Vartanian v. Monsanto Co.,
DISCUSSION
The plaintiffs seek both declaratory and monetary relief, alleging that the school sponsored program deprived the minor plaintiffs of: (1) their privacy rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments; (2) their substantive due process rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments; (3) their procedural due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment; and (4) their First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause (in conjunction with a deprivation of the parent plaintiffs’ right to direct and control the upbringing of their children). Plaintiffs also allege that the Program created a sexually hostile educational environment in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq. 2
As an initial matter, we briefly address defendants’ assertion of the defense of qualified immunity. Plaintiffs seek monetary damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
3
and defendants assert the affirmative defense of qualified immunity, which shields public officials performing discretionary functions from liability for civil damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a rea
*531
sonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The Supreme Court has explained that: “A necessary concomitant to the determination of whether the constitutional right asserted by a plaintiff is ‘clearly established’ at the time the defendant acted is the determination of whether the plaintiff has asserted a violation of a constitutional right at all.”
Siegert v. Gilley,
Accordingly, we first address each of the plaintiffs’ claims to determine whether it states a cause of action under federal law. If any of the claims meet this threshold requirement, we will then proceed to the issue of qualified immunity.
I. Privacy Rights and Substantive Due Process
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[n]o State shall ... deprive any person of life liberty or property without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend XIV. The substantive component of due process protects against “certain government actions regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.”
Daniels v. Williams,
A. Conscience Shocking Behavior
Plaintiffs’ claim that the defendants engaged in conscience shocking behavior when they compelled the minor plaintiffs to attend the Program. The Supreme Court set the standard for analyzing claims of conscience shocking behavior in
Rochin.
In that case, the Court held that the government could not use evidence obtained by pumping a defendant’s stomach against his will because the state actor’s conduct was so egregious that it “shock[ed] the conscience” and offended even “hardened sensibilities.”
Rochin,
Similarly, we have found “conscience shocking” conduct only where the state actors engaged in “extreme or intrusive physical conduct.”
Souza v. Pina,
Although we have not foreclosed the possibility that words or verbal harassment may constitute “conscious shocking” behavior in violation of substantive due process rights,
see Souza,
In
Souza,
the plaintiff alleged that the prosecutor had caused the suicide of her son by conducting press conferences in which he encouraged the media to link the son to a string of serial murders. The plaintiff further alleged that the prosecutor knew of her son’s suicidal tendencies and should have known that he would take his own life as a result of the accusations. Although we “pause[d] to make clear that we do not condone the conduct alleged by Souza,” we nevertheless found that the conduct was not “conscience shocking.”
Souza,
In
Pittsley,
police officers told two young children — ages four and ten — that “if we ever see your father on the street again, you’ll never see him again.”
Pittsley,
The facts alleged at bar are less severe than those found insufficient in Souza and Pittsley. The minor teenagers in this case were compelled to attend a sexually explicit AIDS awareness assembly without prior parent approval. While the defendants’ failure to provide opt-out procedures may have displayed a certain callousness towards the sensibilities of the minors, their acts do not approach the mean-spirited brutality evinced by the defendants in Souza and Pittsley. We accordingly hold that the acts alleged here, taken as true, do not constitute conscience shocking and thus fail to state a claim under Rochin.
B. Protected Liberty Interests
The Supreme Court has held that the Fourteenth Amendment encompasses a privacy right that protects against significant government intrusions into certain personal decisions.
See Roe v. Wade,
1. Right to Rear Children
Parent-plaintiffs allege that the defendants violated their privacy right to direct the upbringing of their children and educate them in accord with their own views. This, they maintain, is a constitutionally protected “fundamental right” and thus can only be infringed upon a showing of a “compelling state interest” that cannot be achieved by any less restrictive means.
*533
The genesis of the right claimed here can be found in
Meyer v. Nebraska,
While this Court has not attempted to define "with exactness the liberty [guaranteed by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment], the term has received much consideration and some of the included things have been definitely stated. Without doubt, it denotes not merely freedom from bodily restraint but also the right of the individual to contract, to engage in any of the common occupations of life, to acquire useful knowledge, to marry, to establish a home and bring up children, to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.
Id.
at 399,
Two years later the Court in
Pierce
struck down a state statute requiring public school attendance — and thus precluding attendance at parochial schools — because it “unreasonably interfere[d] with the liberty of parents or guardians to direct the upbringing and education of children under their control.”
Nevertheless, the Meyer and Pierce cases were decided well before the current “right to privacy” jurisprudence was developed, and the Supreme Court has yet to decide whether the right to direct the upbringing and education of one’s children is among those fundamental rights whose infringement merits heightened scrutiny. We need not decide here whether the right to rear one’s children is fundamental because we find that, even if it were, the plaintiffs have faded to demonstrate an intrusion of constitutional magnitude on this right. 5
The
Meyer
and
Pierce
cases, we think, evince the principle that the state cannot prevent parents from choosing a specific educational program — whether it be religious instruction at a private school or instruction in a foreign language. That is, the state does not have the power to “standardize its children” or “foster a homogenous people” by completely foreclosing the opportunity of individuals and groups to choose a different path of education.
Meyer,
2. Right to be Free from Offensive Speech
The minor plaintiffs maintain that the defendants’ conduct violated their privacy right to be free from “exposure to vulgar and offensive language and obnoxiously debasing portrayals of human sexuality.” Plaintiffs cite no cases — and we have found none— indicating that such a fundamental privacy right exists. Rather, they attempt to extract the claimed privacy right from the Supreme Court’s First Amendment cases which uphold the
state’s
limited power to regulate or discipline speech to protect minors from offensive or vulgar speech.
See Bethel Sch. Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser,
II. Procedural Due Process
The plaintiffs’ third claim alleges that their procedural due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated when the defendants compelled the minor plaintiffs to attend the Program without giving the parents advance notice and an opportunity to opt out of attending.
“In procedural due process claims, the deprivation by state action of a constitutionally protected interest in ‘life, liberty, or property’ is not in itself unconstitutional; what is unconstitutional is the deprivation of such an interest
without due process of law.” Zinermon v. Burch,
The liberty preserved from deprivation without due process includes the right “generally to enjoy those privileges long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.”
Meyer,
The plaintiffs contend that state law and the School Committee’s policy on “Sex Education” (the “Sex Education Policy”) confers a protected liberty interest, and that the defendants’ actions deprived them of it without due process. Specifically, the complaint alleges that the defendants failed to follow the school’s Sex Education Policy, which provides:
The Committee believes that the public schools can best transmit information on human sexuality to students in the context of the health education continuum. Therefore, information and instructional tools appropriate to the age group will be used to include instruction in human sexuality in the curricular offerings on health. Positive subscription, with written parental permission, mil be a prerequisite to enrolling.
(Emphasis added.) The complaint further alleges that the parents were not given advance notice of the contents of the Program or an opportunity to opt out.
Defendants concede for the purposes of their motion that the Sex Education Policy confers a liberty interest in freedom from exposure to the content of the Program and in being afforded an opportunity to opt out.
8
They argue, however, that the plaintiffs still fail to state a claim because the violation of the Sex Education Policy was a “random and unauthorized” act within the confines of the
Parratt-Hudson
doctrine.
Hudson v. Palmer,
In
Parrott,
a state prisoner brought a § 1983 action because prison employees had negligently lost materials he had ordered by mail. The Supreme Court ruled that the prisoner’s post-deprivation tort remedy was all the process that was due because the state could not have provided any predepri-vation procedural safeguard to address the risk of this kind of random and unauthorized deprivation.
Parrott,
Parratt
and
Hudson
preclude § 1983 claims for the “random and unauthorized” conduct of state officials because the state cannot “anticipate and control [such conduct] in advance.”
Zinermon,
Zinermon
involved a due process claim against the state doctors who admitted the plaintiff Burch as a “voluntary” mental patient. Burch alleged that he was incompetent at the time of his admission and should have been afforded the protections provided by the involuntary placement procedure. Although the Court found that
Parratt-Hud-son
doctrine applied to deprivations of liberty, it nevertheless concluded that Burch had failed to state a viable § 1983 claim.
Id.
at 131-32,
The court found that Burch’s claim was not controlled by
Parratt
and
Hudson
for three basic reasons. First, the Court explained that the timing of Burch’s deprivation of liberty was more predictable than in
Parratt
and
Hudson. As
the Court explained, “it is hardly unforeseeable that a person requesting treatment for mental illness might be incapable of informed consent.”
Id.
at 136,
The
Parratt-Hudson-Zinermon
trilogy “requires that courts scrutinize carefully the assertion by state officials that their conduct is ‘random and unauthorized’ ... where such a conclusion limits the procedural due process inquiry under § 1983 to the question of the adequacy of state postdeprivation remedies.”
Lowe v. Scott,
The plaintiffs have not alleged any facts that would bring their claim within the scope of Zinermon. They point to no facts suggesting that the state could have predicted the defendants’ failure to give the required notice and opt-out opportunity, nor do they suggest any reasonable additional predepri-vation procedures which would have meaningfully reduced the risk of the due process violation alleged.
The plaintiffs contend that the deprivation cannot be characterized as “random and unauthorized” because the performance was planned well in advance. This contention ignores both the nature of the deprivation and the relevant caselaw. The deprivation alleged here is not the staging of the Program itself, but rather the defendants’ failure to follow the procedures mandated by the Sex Education Policy. Moreover, the Supreme Court has established that the
Par-ratt-Hudson
doctrine applies to both negligent and intentional tortious acts of state actors, explaining that “it would be absurd to suggest that the State hold a hearing to determine whether a [state official] should engage in such conduct.”
Hudson,
The second stage of a
Parratt-Hudson
analysis looks to whether the state has provided adequate postdeprivation remedies.
Lowe,
III. Free Exercise Clause
Plaintiffs’ fourth claim seeks both monetary and declaratory relief, alleging that the defendants’ endorsement and encouragement of sexual promiscuity at a mandatory assembly “imping[ed] on their sincerely held religious values regarding chastity and morality,” and thereby violated the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
In
Employment Div., Oregon Dep’t of Human Resources v. Smith,
In 1994, Congress enacted the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (“RFRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb, in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in Smith. RFRA states, in relevant part:
(a) In General — Government shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability, except as provided in subsection (b) of this section.
(b) Exception — Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person—
(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and
(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
Id. RFRA states that it was enacted to bring the law back to its pre-Smith state. Id.
The plaintiffs’ Free Exercise challenge raises two complex constitutional issues. The threshold issue is whether the Free Exercise Clause even applies to public education. 11 If indeed the Free Exercise Clause applies to the plaintiffs’ claim, the question would then be whether their free exercise *538 rights were violated by the compulsory attendance at the Program. Because the Program was staged in 1992, and RFRA was enacted in 1994, however, a cause of action under RFRA exists only if the statute applies retroactively. For the reasons stated below, we conclude that RFRA does not apply retroactively to plaintiffs’ claim for monetary damages.
The Supreme Court has explained that courts should “decline[ ] to give retroactive effect to statutes burdening private rights unless Congress ha[s] made clear its intent.”
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
— U.S.-,-,
RFRA states that it “applies to all Federal and State law, whether statutory or otherwise, and whether adopted before or after the enactment of this Act.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb. The statute was enacted to “restore the compelling interest test” and provide judicial relief to persons “whose religious exercise has been burdened in violation of this section.” Id. While RFRA clearly provides access to declaratory and injunctive relief against all laws burdening the free exercise of religion, we think it lacks the “clear, strong, and imperative” language necessary to create a retroactive cause of action for monetary damages.
We have found no decisions in which a plaintiff was awarded damages under RFRA for conduct occurring before the statute’s enactment. Rather, the decisions in which RFRA has been found retroactive considered only the issue of whether to grant injunctive relief, as opposed to an award of monetary damages.
See, e.g., Werner v. McCotter,
The Supreme Court has explained that a “law that is neutral and of general applicability need not be justified by a compelling governmental interest even if the law has the incidental effect of burdening a particular religious practice.”
Church of the
*539
Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah,
-U.S.-,-,
Rather, plaintiffs allege that their case falls within the “hybrid” exception recognized by
Smith
for cases that involve “the Free Exercise Clause in conjunction with other constitutional protections.”
Smith,
Pierce stands as a charter of the rights of parents to direct the religious upbringing of their children. And, when combined with a free exercise claim of the nature revealed by this record, more than merely a “reasonable relation to some purpose within the competency of the State” is required to sustain the validity of the State’s requirement under the First Amendment.
Id.
at 232-33,
First, as we explained, the plaintiffs’ allegations of interference with family relations and parental prerogatives do not state a privacy or substantive due process claim. Their free exercise challenge is thus not conjoined with an independently protected constitutional protection. Second, their free exercise claim is qualitatively distinguishable from that alleged in Yoder. As the Court in Yoder emphasized:
the Amish in this case have convincingly demonstrated the sincerity of their religious beliefs, the interrelationship of belief with their mode of life, the vital role that belief and daily conduct play in the continued survival of Old Order Amish communities and their religious organization, and the hazards presented by the State’s enforcement of a Statute generally valid as to others.
Id.
at 235,
The plaintiffs also seek a declaratory judgment concerning the alleged infringement of their Free Exercise Rights. The standing requirement of Article III necessitates that the claimant “allege personal injury fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct and likely to be addressed by the requested relief.”
Allen v. Wright,
IV. Sexual Harassment
The plaintiffs’ fifth claim alleges that the defendants engaged in sexual harassment by creating a sexually hostile environment, in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Title IX provides in relevant part:
*540 No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance-
20 U.S.C. § 1681. Because the relevant caselaw under Title IX is relatively sparse, we apply Title VII caselaw by analogy.
See Franklin v. Gwinnett County Pub. Schs.,
Title VII, and thus Title IX, “strike at the entire spectrum of disparate treatment of men and women,” including conduct having the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with an individual’s performance or creating an intimidating, hostile or offensive environment.
Meritor Sav. Bank, FSB v. Vinson, 477
U.S. 57, 64-65,
Sexual harassment which creates a hostile or offensive environment for members of one sex is every bit the arbitrary barrier to sexual equality at the workplace that racial harassment is to racial equality. Surely, a requirement that a man or woman run a gauntlet of sexual abuse in return for the privilege of being allowed to work and make a living can be as demeaning and disconcerting as the harshest of racial epithets.
Meritor, 477
U.S. at 67,
The elements a plaintiff must prove to succeed in such type of sexual harassment claim are: (i) that he/she is a member of a protected class; (ii) that he/she was subject to unwelcome sexual harassment; (iii) that the harassment was based upon sex; (iv) that the harassment was sufficiently severe or pervasive so as to alter the conditions of plaintiffs education and create an abusive educational environment; and (v) that some basis for employer liability has been established.
Id.
at 66-73,
Title IX is violated “[w]hen the [educational environment] is permeated with ‘discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and insult’ that is ‘sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim’s employment and create an abusive ... environment.’ ”
Harris,
— U.S. at-,
The Court has explained that the relevant factors must be viewed both objectively and subjectively.
See id.
at-,
Turning to the case at bar, we find that the facts alleged here are insufficient to state a claim for sexual harassment under a hostile environment theory. The plaintiffs’ allegations are weak on every one of the Harris factors, and when considered in sum, are clearly insufficient to establish the existence of an objectively hostile or abusive environment. First, plaintiffs cannot claim *541 that the offensive speech occurred frequently, as they allege only a one-time exposure to the comments. 13
We also think that the plaintiffs’ allegations do not establish that Landolphi’s comments were so severe as to create an objectively hostile environment. This finding is based on both the context and content of her remarks. The remarks were given to the entire ninth and tenth grades at what the defendants labelled an “AIDS awareness program.” Significantly, the plaintiffs do not allege that they were required to participate in any of the offensive skits or that they were the direct objects of Landolphi’s sexual comments.
Moreover, during his introductory remarks, defendant Gilchrist advised students that the purpose of the Program was to educate them about the dangers of sexual activity, stating:
We [ ] see young people in their twenties who are infected with the AIDS virus.... It means they caught the virus when they were in high school, and will be dead before they are thirty years old. That’s why the doctors are scared, and they want you to hear the message.
Now, sometimes to hear a message, it takes a special messenger. And today, we have a very special messenger, who uses probably one of the most effective forms of communication — humor. I want you to listen carefully. Enjoy it, but also remember, the message.
Similarly, Landolphi stated in her opening remarks that “[wje’re going to talk about AIDS, but not in the usual way.” These prefaces framed the Program in such a way that an objective person would understand that Landolphi’s allegedly vulgar sexual commentary was intended to educate the students about the AIDS virus rather than to create a sexually hostile environment.
These introductions also belie the plaintiffs’ claim that Landolphi’s speech was physically threatening and humiliating, rather than a mere offensive utterance. Landol-phi’s remarks were not directed specifically at the plaintiffs and were couched in an attempt to use humor to educate the students on sex and the AIDS virus. In this context, while average high school students might have been offended by the graphic sexual discussions alleged here, Landolphi’s remarks could not reasonably be considered physically threatening or humiliating so as to create a hostile environment.
Similarly, the plaintiffs’ allegations establish that the Program did not significantly alter their educational environment from an objective standpoint. The Program consisted of two ninety-minute sex-education presentations, and although the plaintiffs allege that “coarse jesting, sexual innuendo, and overtly sexual behavior took place for the weeks following the Program,” they fail to explain how the coarse jesting and overtly sexual behavior “create[d] an atmosphere so infused with hostility toward members of one sex that [it] alter[ed] the [educational environment] for them.”
Lipsett,
CONCLUSION
We have considered the other claims of the plaintiffs and find them similarly without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c) gives a court discretion to "decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a [state law] claim [where] the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.”
. The complaint also alleges five state law claims which are irrelevant for purposes of this appeal.
. Section 1983 provides a remedy against any person who, under color of state law, deprives a citizen of his or her constitutional rights. 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
. A penile plethysmograph assesses a person's sexual profile by the placement of a gauge on the subjects’ penis while he views various sexually explicit slides of both adults and children.
. The issue is muddled because the
Meyer
and
Pierce
cases were decided on the grounds that the "statute as applied is arbitrary and without reasonable relation to any end within the competency of the state.”
Meyer,
Moreover, it should be noted that these cases were decided in the 1920’s, before the Bill of Rights was incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment, and would probably be decided today on First Amendment grounds. Rotunda & Nowak,
Treatise on Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure,
§ 21.7 (2d ed. 1992); Laurence H. Tribe,
American Constitutional Law,
§ 15-6 at 1319-20 (1988) (suggesting that they reflect the First Amendment’s limit on the state’s ability to "contract the spectrum of available knowledge”) (quoting
Griswold v. Connecticut,
. Plaintiffs claim that
Alfonso v. Fernández,
. The Supreme Court has explained that a special situation pertains where a free exercise challenge is brought in conjunction with a substantive due process challenge involving the right of parents to direct the upbringing of their children.
See Employment Div. v. Smith,
. The plaintiffs also maintain that Mass.Ann. Laws ch. 71, § 1 (1995) confers a protected liberty interest. That statute grants a right to opt out from “instruction on disease” to students whose “sincerely held religious beliefs” conflict with such instruction. Defendants assume for the purposes of this appeal that Mass.Gen.L. ch. 71, § 1 is an alternative source for the claimed liberty interest.
. Other circuits have interpreted the doctrine similarly.
See Caine v. Hardy,
. As the district court noted, although three defendants were members of the School Committee (which adopted the Sex Education Policy), the plaintiffs do not allege that these defendants, either individually or as a group, were authorized to circumvent a policy adopted and enacted by the School Committee as a whole.
. At least one federal judge has argued that the Free Exercise Clause does not restrict the "prerogative of school boards to set curricula,” concluding that school boards’ authority in such matters is bounded only by the Establishment Clause.
Mozert v. Hawkins County Board of Education,
. Even assuming that RFRA created a retroactive cause of action for monetary damages, the plaintiffs' free exercise claim would nevertheless be analyzed under Smith because all the defendants' with the possible exception of the School Committee are protected by qualified immunity from monetary damages.
As we explained above, qualified immunity shields public officials from pecuniary liability unless they violated constitutional or statutory norms that were "clearly established” at the time of the violation.
Anderson v. Creighton,
Because the Program was staged in 1992, the standard set forth in
Smith
(rather than the less rigorous RFRA standard) must be employed to determine whether the defendants violated a clearly established right when they compelled the minor plaintiffs’ attendance at the Program.
See Werner v. McCotter,
. We do not hold that a one-time episode is per se incapable of sustaining a hostile environment claim. The frequency of the alleged harassment is a significant factor, but only one of many to be considered in determining whether the conduct was "sufficiently severe or pervasive" that a reasonable person would find that it had rendered the environment hostile or abusive.
