Serious question, is the teacher allowed to make rules that supersede the constitution? I have long since lost interest in this topic as a whole, but if the kid is to be believed then the teacher has created rules that negate the students' first amendment rights. Do they actually have the authority to do so?
So should I tell my son he can stand up in math class tomorrow and give a speech about his rights regarding unreasonable search and seizure?
Should I tell him he has the right, whenever a person sneezes, to say "the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun!"
When he's told to be quiet he should insist that he's just exercising his rights and that the teacher has no authority to silence him.
In short, yes, the teach has every right to establish classroom rules. Including limiting topics of discussion, phrases used, etc.
We all do understand that our right to free speech doesn't mean anyone has to provide us with a medium to express our views, right?
If this were a science class and the subject was evolution the teacher would not have to allow a student who doesn't believe in evolution to constantly stop the lessons to debate the merits of evolutionary science. The class is not a debate class and it is not the time or the place to try to solve the differences between evolutionists and creationists.