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Strazicich, Mirko, Ed. – 1988
Adopted by the California State Board of Education on June 10, 1988, this handbook outlines the legal rights and responsibilities that school personnel have and their educational responsibilities in such areas as morality, democratic values, and religion in the schools. Section I, "Moral Values and Public Education," addresses the issues…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Civics, Codes of Ethics
Goldstein, Stephen R.; And Others – 1995
All three branches of American government--legislative, executive, and judicial--play a significant role in shaping the enterprise of American public education. This book, an update of the 1980 second edition, describes and analyzes changes in education and the dynamic impact of the law on education's authority. The book can serve as an advanced…
Descriptors: Compliance (Legal), Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Educational History
Cate, Fred H. – 1998
Rather than focus on "who" makes the determination about students' access to sexually explicit expression, this volume examines the legal issues affecting "whether" to permit that access and "how much" access to allow. In sum, this book is intended to facilitate meaningful discussion about the regulation of minors'…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Elementary Secondary Education, Information Policy, Information Sources
Baca, M. Carlota, Ed.; Stein, Ronald H., Ed. – 1983
Eighteen professionals analyze the ethical principles, practices, and problems in institutions of higher learning by examining the major issues facing higher education today. Focusing on ethical standards and judgements that affect decision-making and problem-solving, the contributors review the rights and responsibilities of academic freedom,…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrators, Athletics, Codes of Ethics
Berger, Raoul – 1981
Chapter 1 of a book on school law, this article analyzes the role of the U.S. Supreme Court, and contends that there has been a judicial takeover of functions that had been delegated by the Constitution to the states and to the people. Specifically, the author argues that much of the Supreme Court's expansion of its powers rests on the selective…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Court Role, Due Process