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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
Sanders, Steve – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A case pending in a federal court of appeals in California may clarify a surprisingly murky question: Do faculty members at public universities enjoy a special privilege to speak freely about institutional matters, or, as far as the First Amendment is concerned, are they just another category of government hirelings? Juan Hong, a professor of…
Descriptors: Federal Courts, Constitutional Law, College Faculty, Public Colleges
Kilman, Carrie – Teaching Tolerance, 2007
In this article, the author discusses how a school district in Modesto, California deals with religious diversity. Modesto requires that every 9th-grader in the district enroll in a semester-long world religions course. Ninth grade made sense--students were old enough to handle the subject material, and the emphasis on religious diversity happened…
Descriptors: Grade 9, State Standards, Constitutional Law, Religion
Zirkel, Perry A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2005
On 26 September 2001, the Chino Valley School District, which is approximately 30 miles east of Los Angeles, signed a negotiated agreement with the duly authorized union representing the certified employees, the Associated Chino Teachers (ACT). The agreement provided that every member of the represented unit would become either a member of the ACT…
Descriptors: Religion, Equal Protection, Court Litigation, Constitutional Law
Haynes, Charles C. – School Administrator, 2006
From northern California to southern Florida, there are just too many superintendents who are reluctant to touch religion with the proverbial 10-foot pole. Following the let-sleeping-dogs-lie approach to administration, they start to think about First Amendment solutions only after a fight breaks out. By then it is often too late to avert a bitter…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Religion, School Districts, Public Education
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
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
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Westerfield, Louis – Southern University Law Review, 1977
Bakke vs The Regents of the University of California is examined in historical perspective and in light of recent developments in the area of reverse discrimination. An attempt is made to analyze the nature of the California Supreme Court's holding, demonstrate the errors in the logic, and expose the potentially catastrophic results should the…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, Constitutional Law, Higher Education, Legal Responsibility
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Timar, Thomas – Peabody Journal of Education, 2005
In August 2000, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a class-action lawsuit on behalf of school children against the state of California. The suit, Williams v. State of California, alleged that the state failed to exercise its constitutional obligation to provide equal access to education for all students in the state by allowing deficient…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Court Litigation, Educational Equity (Finance), Policy Analysis
Fetler, Mark E. – 1990
In 1988, California voters passed a constitutional ballot initiative, Proposition 98, that required local districts to publish School Accountability Report Cards containing information on specific school characteristics. This study documents some key events leading to the passage of Proposition 98 and the subsequent implementation of the report…
Descriptors: Accountability, Annual Reports, Case Studies, Constitutional Law
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Cunningham, Maureen P.; And Others – Journal of College and University Law, 1988
A case in which California's constitutional right to privacy is used to protect confidential peer review files is analyzed, and the case's significance and possible ramifications for discovery requests of peer review files are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Confidentiality, Constitutional Law
Shea, Christopher – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1995
A California superior court struck down a Stanford University antiharassment policy, saying that it restricted students' free-speech rights. The policy had banned face-to-face insults that stigmatize students on the basis of such things as race, sex, or religion. California law requires private colleges to grant students the same constitutional…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Censorship, College Administration, Constitutional Law
Buchser, Linda – 1982
Reviewing literature on educational finance and law, this paper analyzes the rationale for the recent school finance reform movement and recounts the movement's progress from 1965 to 1979. An overview of the problem discusses state equalization programs' ability to provide financial equity and the relationship of financial equity to equal…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Trends
Chronicle of Higher Education, 1986
State higher education-related referenda and 1986 voter response are listed concerning compensation of state employees, facility improvement, bond issues, English as the official state language, taxes and tax policy, lotteries for financing education, state trust funds for education funding, and governing boards. (MSE)
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Constitutional Law, Educational Finance, Elections
Forbes, Jack D. – 1977
Focusing on the protection of Native American places of worship and religious property, this monograph cites several pertinent guarantees of religious freedom found in constitutional or treaty laws, and in court decisions; and gives samples of their abuse throughout history. These guarantees of Native rights are found in the First and Fifth…
Descriptors: American Indians, Civil Liberties, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation
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