NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 10 results Save | Export
Zehr, Mary Ann – Education Week, 2011
The pace at which the highest-performing charter-management organizations (CMOs) are "scaling up" is being determined largely by how rapidly they can develop and hire strong leaders and acquire physical space, and by the level of support they receive for growth from city or state policies, say leaders from some charter organizations…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Barriers, Educational Development, Court Litigation
Aarons, Dakarai I. – Education Week, 2010
More than a half-century after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered schools desegregated, districts are still grappling with how best to create the kind of demographically diverse public schools that many experts believe improve outcomes for disadvantaged students. This article reports on the recent decision by a North Carolina district to move from a…
Descriptors: School Districts, Student Placement, Student Diversity, School Resegregation
Sawchuk, Stephen – Education Week, 2010
A settlement crafted last week seeking to curb the use of seniority as a factor in teacher layoffs in the Los Angeles school system could become one of the nation's most far-reaching overhauls of the "last hired, first fired" policies common in school districts. If approved by a judge, the settlement would shield up to 45 low-performing…
Descriptors: Job Layoff, Court Litigation, Urban Schools, School Districts
Walsh, Mark – Education Week, 2010
Arizona's variation on government vouchers for religious schools and California's prohibition on the sale of violent video games to minors present the top two cases with implications for education in the U.S. Supreme Court term that formally begins Oct. 4. New Justice Elena Kagan brings to the court extensive education policy experience as a…
Descriptors: Educational Vouchers, Video Games, Court Litigation, Federal Courts
Maxwell, Lesli A. – Education Week, 2007
When Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa revealed plans to take over the sprawling school district that serves his city, the charismatic Democrat had an abundance of political capital to push for the changes he believed necessary to raise student achievement and boost the dismal graduation rates that have dogged the city for years. Now, after a…
Descriptors: School Districts, Graduation Rate, Court Litigation, Educational Change
Jacobson, Linda – Education Week, 2006
In this article, the author describes how the California's lowest-achieving schools are routinely visited by inspectors on the lookout for, among other things, inadequate textbook supplies, dirty drinking water, and evidence of vermin. Following the settlement from the case "Williams v. California," the laws known as the "Williams…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, School Visitation, Instructional Materials, Educational Policy
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2005
Young people have long sported T-shirts that schools wish they'd leave at home. Legal fights have been waged in recent years, for example, over shirts about guns, abortion, the Confederate battle flag, and the war in Iraq. But at a time when gay rights remains a divisive and unsettled issue nationally, a recent spate of disputes over T-shirts on…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Court Litigation, Freedom of Speech, Student Rights
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2004
Pledging allegiance to the flag--and the "one nation under God" it is said to represent--has been second nature to generations of American schoolchildren. Yet few have had as much reason to reflect on the practice as those in Sacramento, California. Since March 2000, California's Elk Grove school district has faced a legal challenge to…
Descriptors: School Districts, Court Litigation, State Church Separation, Constitutional Law
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2004
This article reports on a lawsuit filed by Michael A. Newdow, a California atheist, on behalf of his daughter, against inclusion of the words "under God" in public schools' recitals of the United States Pledge of Allegiance. He said that the words "under God" represent "religious dogma" that is needlessly divisive.…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Position Papers, Court Litigation, Religious Conflict
Hendrie, Caroline – Education Week, 2004
This article reports on the fiery California atheist who lost his bid at the U.S. Supreme Court to get "under God" stricken from the Pledge of Allegiance. Dr. Michael A. Newdow, an emergency-room physician with a law degree who represented himself before the Supreme Court in the high-profile case against the Elk Grove, California, school…
Descriptors: School Districts, Court Litigation, State Church Separation, Constitutional Law