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McCormick, Kathleen – American School Board Journal, 1985
The peer review system for evaluating schools (the "Toledo Plan") is gaining favor among teachers in other school systems. Schools are generally reluctant to dismiss incompetent teachers because of documentation complexities, but incompetent teachers should nevertheless be weeded out. (TE)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Due Process, Peer Evaluation, Personnel Policy

Mesibov, Laurie – School Law Bulletin, 1984
Although school boards have the authority to order a teacher to undergo a medical examination, the board's concern should be only with the teacher's fitness. Policy guidelines are offered that protect a teacher's right to due process. (MLF)
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education, Mental Health
Caplan, Gerald A. – 1984
The practitioner advising a school board in connection with a reduction in force can appreciate that the board has great flexibility in implementing its decision. As long as the board's actions are not arbitrary, capricious, or pretextual, and they afford minimal due process protections to tenured teachers, the board's decisions will withstand…
Descriptors: Dismissal (Personnel), Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education, Legal Problems
Lines, Patricia M. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1985
A review of court decisions about teacher testing programs shows that tests must be equitable and fair, must not be used to discriminate by race or sex, and that adequate notice to teachers is required. (MLF)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education, Justice
Galante, Susan – 1983
Tenured teaching staff member in New Jersey cannot be dismissed from their positions unless a board of education establishes just cause in a hearing before the Commissioner of Education. This pamphlet, designed to assist boards in filing dismissal proceedings for unsatisfactory tenured teachers, provides a comprehensive review of all recent tenure…
Descriptors: Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education
Richards, Joe B. – 1984
This checklist is designed to reduce the prospect that a termination decision will be reversed in a grievance procedure, arbitration, state agency hearing, or court proceeding. The checklist is arranged under the following headings: (1) What is the real reason for considering firing this individual? (distinction between reduction-in-force and…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Compliance (Legal), Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education

Joyce, Robert P. – School Law Bulletin, 1985
Teachers and other public employees enjoy the same fundamental rights as other citizens. They are entitled to free speech--though the privilege is not limitless--and to due process and equal protection under the law. (Author/DCS)
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Court Litigation, Due Process, Employer Employee Relationship
Montana Legislative Council, Helena. – 1984
The examination of Montana's teacher tenure laws as mandated by House Joint Resolution 43, required a thorough review of the legislative development of the teacher employment laws, a summary of relevant case law on the rights of school boards and teachers, an awareness of the philosophical postures of the affected parties, and a dispassionate look…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Due Process, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education
Thomas, Howard – 1983
Since employee salaries and fringe benefits make up the major part of school budgets, any reduction in budgets must be accomplished by reducing personnel. Concentrating on Oklahoma, but citing legal decisions in other states as well, a legal summary is presented for reduction in force when funds are unavailable to complete a school budget. As in…
Descriptors: Budgeting, Court Litigation, Declining Enrollment, Due Process
Zirkel, Perry A. – 1983
This chapter provides an overview of legislation and litigation relating to reduction in force (RIF) with a focus on cases decided since 1980. State statutes continue to be the primary source of the law concerning RIF, so a table is provided for these statutes and their various provisions. These statutes include the dismissla-type, and the less…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Court Litigation, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education
Uerling, Donald F. – 1981
This paper presents examples of judicial reasoning in conflicts involving governing board bias and the power to decide in higher education and in various public school settings. Two cases, "Simard v. Board of Education" and "Hortonville Joint School District No. 1 v. Hortonville Education Association," provide the general…
Descriptors: Administrators, Board Administrator Relationship, Boards of Education, Court Litigation
Sistrunk, Walter E. – 1982
Statutory and case law since 1953 have created a firm basis for personnel policy in Mississippi public school districts. House Bill No. 11 (1953) prescribed methods for the selection and employment of professional staff and conditions for their suspension and dismissal, establishing rights of proper notice and due process. Standards for…
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation, Due Process
Beckham, Joseph C. – 1986
Use of nationally standardized tests to determine teacher competency continues to be a subject for review in state and federal courts. School district policies have promoted minimum score requirements as a basis for employment decisions concerning certification, hiring, renewal, promotion, and merit pay. Legal challenges to these policies focus…
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Civil Rights, Court Litigation, Due Process
Barton, Martha – 1984
This speech reviews the power of school boards with respect to dismissal, and identifies implications of due process for supervision and evaluation, particularly as it relates to incompetence as a basis for dismissal. The first section defines the state-sanctioned powers of a school board, including the difference between discretionary and…
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation, Due Process
Lee, Barbara A. – 1986
This chapter addresses developments concerning faculty tenure, examines institutional responses to new pressures and the litigation by faculty over those reponses, and explores faculty and administration rights and responsibilities. Academic administrators have realized that the reappointment, tenure, and promotion processes are an opportunity to…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Contracts, Court Litigation
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