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Rhen, Brad – Education Week, 2011
A new video game in which the player stalks and shoots fellow students and teachers in school settings is drawing fire from school district officials. "School Shooter: North American Tour 2012" is a first-person game that allows the player to move around a school and collect points by killing defenseless students and teachers. The game,…
Descriptors: Violence, Video Games, Popular Culture, Mass Media Effects
Cauthen, Cramer R. – 1995
Despite Stanley Fish's assertion that the interpretive communities basic to his theory of literary and legal interpretation are "engines of change," it seems clear that in Fish's conception of change, "plus ca change, c'est plus la meme chose." In particular, Fish denies that the legal profession can achieve the more…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Decision Making, Higher Education, Ideology
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Lomicky, Carol S. – Journal of Law and Education, 2000
In "Hazelwood" the U.S. Supreme Court said public school officials can censor school-sponsored expression for legitimate educational purposes. A content-analysis case study of student-written newspaper editorials found that more than three times as many editorials of criticism were published prior to the Court's decision. Argues that…
Descriptors: Censorship, Content Analysis, Court Litigation, Criticism
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Baldwin, Gordon B. – Library Trends, 1996
Argues that the Library Bill of Rights aims to codify First Amendment doctrine and the interests of librarians but falls short. Law allows distinctions between government and private action and reaffirms the discretion of decision makers. The Library Bill of Rights, as shown in discussion of several court decisions, is often far more rigid.…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Censorship, Civil Law, Civil Liberties
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Essex, Nathan L. – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2006
This article address the legal and constitutional issues surrounding how far school leaders can go in restricting distribution of materials that are viewed as religious in nature. Does restricting the student's right to distribute the flyer amount to a suppression of free speech based on content? Does the principal's action constitute unlawful…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Public Schools, Student Rights, Principals