educational law and legislation

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a
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educational law and legislation

School law

what every educator should know : a user-friendly guide.
2008
A guide to school law for teachers that covers contracts, tenure, collective bargaining, responsibilities, liabilities, negligence, libel, slander, child abuse and neglect, freedom of expression, due process rights, discrimination and equal protection, and other related topics.

Student rights

2018
Explores issues with students and their legal rights.
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The schoolhouse gate

public education, the Supreme Court, and the battle for the American mind
"By a brilliant young constitutional scholar at the University of Chicago--who clerked on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia for Judge Merrick B. Garland and on the Supreme Court of the United States for Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Stephen Breyer, and who also happens to be an elegant stylist--a powerfully alarming book concerned to vindicate the constitutional rights of public school students, so often trampled upon by the Supreme Court in recent decades Supreme Court decisions involving the constitutional rights of students in the nation's public schools have consistently been most controversial. From racial segregation to unauthorized immigration, from economic inequality to public prayer and homeschooling: these are but a few of the many divisive issues that the Supreme Court has addressed vis-a-vis elementary and secondary education. The Schoolhouse Gate gives a fresh, lucid, and provocative account of the historic legal battles waged over education. It argues that since the 1970s, the Supreme Court through its decisions has transformed public schools into Constitution-free zones. Students deriving lessons about citizenship from the Court's decisions over the last four decades would conclude that the following actions taken by school officials pass constitutional muster: inflicting severe corporeal punishment on students without any procedural protections; searching students and their possessions, without probable cause, in bids to uncover violations of school rules; engaging in random drug testing of students who are not suspected of any wrongdoing; and suppressing student speech solely for the viewpoint that it espouses. Taking their cue from such decisions, lower courts have validated a wide array of constitutionally dubious actions, including: repressive student dress codes; misguided "zero tolerance" disciplinary policies; degrading student strip searches; and harsh restrictions on off-campus speech in the internet age. Justin Driver dramatically and keenly surveys this battlefield of constitutional meaning and warns that impoverished views of constitutional protections will only further rend our social fabric"--.
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Education and the law

a dictionary
1996
An encyclopedia of issues and ideas that affect education law, such as censorship, dress codes, hazing, pregnant students, and vouchers, arranged alphabetically by key word, and including an overview of the history and sources of education law.

Speaking up

the unintended costs of free speech in public schools
2009

Classrooms in the crossfire

the rights and interests of students, parents, teachers, administrators, librarians, and the community
1981

Dismantling desegregation

the quiet reversal of Brown v. Board of Education
1996
Chronicles the history of desegregation in public schools, discusses how some schools are quietly fighting to reinstate segregation, and explains why those efforts will be harmful to minority students.

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