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Thomas H. Sawyer; Tonya L. Sawyer – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
A girls' field hockey team coach instructed players to warm up in an area adjacent to the school's turf field, where the boys' soccer team was practicing. Plaintiff Morgan Dennehy, a member of the field hockey team, was struck at the base of her skull by an errant soccer ball. The plaintiff filed this suit against the coach, the school and others…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Team Sports, Student Athletes, Athletic Coaches
Nathaniel Robert Myers – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Cell phones have become a major part of our lives, and as such, they have presented new problems for school officials. This dissertation explores the current status of Fourth Amendment Law and how courts are applying the law to the search and seizure of cell phones in schools, by reviewing cases regarding search and seizure of electronic devices,…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Handheld Devices, School Policy, Educational History
Alice L. Karakas – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This doctoral study collected and analyzed the narratives of four adult professionals who work to reduce truancy in school-age children grades K-12. Truancy is a complex issue that has far-reaching consequences for all stakeholders from the single student up through the collective society at large. While truancy studies can be found in the…
Descriptors: Truancy, Prevention, Elementary Secondary Education, Adults
Muñiz, Raquel; Lewis, Maria M.; Tumer, Tugce; Kane, Emma – American Journal of Education, 2023
Purpose: In this study, we examine the policy discourse in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) case before the US Supreme Court, a case with implications for education. The case drew a wide range of interested groups who weighed in on the policy as amici curiae, "friends of the court," offering perspectives about the…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Court Litigation, Race, Immigration
Rachel E. Smith – William & Mary Educational Review, 2023
In the United States, higher education accreditation is the process through which regional and specialized accreditors extend seals of approval to institutions and programs that meet specific standards for education quality and institutional stability. Regional accreditors, such as the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Organizations (Groups), Black Colleges, Accreditation (Institutions)
Perloff, Andrew – Education Next, 2022
For decades, college athletes have been barred from using their name, image, and likeness (NIL) to earn money through the sort of lucrative endorsement deals that professional athletes commonly sign. The ban by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), which sets the rules for college sports, was intended to reflect students' official…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Reputation, Competition, Intercollegiate Cooperation
Garces, Liliana M.; Ambriz, Evelyn; Pedota, Jackie – Educational Researcher, 2022
Over the last 3 years, the advocacy organization Speech First has filed six lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of bias response teams on the grounds that they violate free speech. Bias response teams are university-wide committees that respond to reports of racially charged incidents on college campuses to promote institutional goals of…
Descriptors: Bias, Crisis Management, College Environment, Court Litigation
Al-Jaf, Fwrat Rostam Ameen – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2020
The function of the judiciary is to protect the law system and the law rights and centers by a request applied to it by the concerned persons, and by issuing decisions and verdicts that remove the state of ignoring which surrounds the right or the law center wanted to be protected in which it gets the binding force of the thing judged owing to its…
Descriptors: Judges, Foreign Countries, Court Litigation, Justice
Miller, John J.; Paschen, Tucker L.; Doss, Kelvin D. – Physical Educator, 2021
The case of "Pellham v. Let's Go Tubing, Inc." (2017) is the result of the plaintiff striking a fallen log in the river after he fell off an inner tube he had rented from the defendants. The plaintiff sustained a ruptured eardrum, lower-disk problems in his back, a radiating foot pain, and eventually a neck fusion. The plaintiff alleged…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Risk, Legal Responsibility, Negligence
Jon S. Iftikar; David H. K. Nguyen – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
The recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions "Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College" (2023) and "Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina et al." (2023), hereafter collectively referred to as "SFFA v. Harvard," have garnered attention, especially among…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Affirmative Action, College Admission, Civil Rights Legislation
Lesley M. Harris; Sara M. Williams; Eva X. Nyerges; Rebecka Bloomer – Journal of Social Work Education, 2024
Britney Spears's 2020 testimony about her 13-year conservatorship highlighted ethical concerns surrounding surrogate decision making. Social workers engage with families and clients in conservatorship/guardianship arrangements. However, social work educational programs spend little time preparing students for surrogate decision making and…
Descriptors: Social Work, Caseworkers, Contracts, Court Litigation
Erica Goldblatt Hyatt; Maha Younes; Heather Witt – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2024
As concerns for reproductive rights continue to be debated across the United States, the June 24th, 2022, U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the Mississippi case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization that overturned Roe v. Wade essentially upended the disciplinary foundations and ethical underpinnings of helping professions. The Council on…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Court Litigation, Social Work, Professional Education
Mukherjee, Renu – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2023
In a plurality opinion in the 1978 Supreme Court case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, Justice Lewis Powell held that colleges and universities could consider an applicant's race in the admissions process in order to attain a diverse student body. In a pair of cases that will be decided in the current term, the Supreme Court has…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Affirmative Action, Public Opinion, Courts
Nishi, Naomi W. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2022
Affirmative Action in higher education exemplifies interest convergence, and beyond this, interest divergence and imperialistic reclamation. Diversity initiatives, such as the Inclusive Excellence initiative, have adopted key strategies and reasoning developed in Affirmative Action Supreme Court cases. This paper shows how semantic concessions and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Affirmative Action, Court Litigation, College Admission
Marcon Zabecki, Jessica; Quigley-McBride, Adele; Meissner, Christian A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Across two experimental studies, we investigated the role of information loss, contextual information, and distinctive features of fingerprints on novice's ability to judge whether two fingerprints came from the same source. Distinctive fingerprints resulted in more accurate decisions. Information loss diminished performance on the comparison…
Descriptors: Crime, Evidence, Human Body, Court Litigation

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