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Gürbüz, Mustafa Çagri; Aydin, Bünyamin; Gürbüz, Tuba – International Journal of Modern Education Studies, 2022
The "Teaching Profession Law" came into force in February 2022 to regulate the professional rights of teachers. The scope and purpose of this law are to regulate the professional development and career steps of teachers. This research aimed to determine the opinions of teachers about the new law of the profession. It is a descriptive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Law, Teacher Rights, Academic Freedom
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Óhidy, Andrea; Riddell, Sheila; Boutiuc-Kaiser, Alina – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2022
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) recently had its 30th anniversary. Emerging from the United Nations General Assembly in 1989, it has since become the most ratified international human rights treaty ever. Most European countries ratified it and are thus obliged to ensure the implementation of children's rights in practice.…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Access to Education, Civil Rights, Minority Groups
Schimmel, David; Militello, Matthew – Principal Leadership, 2008
Principals are the chief teachers of law in their schools. However, many principals would say that teaching law is not in their job description and that they do not need another responsibility, but intentional or not, most principals already teach law--in staff meetings; in teacher conferences; in informal conversations; and when they develop,…
Descriptors: Principals, School Law, Administrators, National Surveys
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Militello, Matthew; Schimmel, David; Eberwein, H. Jake – NASSP Bulletin, 2009
The purpose of this national survey is to determine secondary school principals' knowledge of the rights of students and teachers, how often principals are legally threatened and sued, how they adjust their behaviors in response, and how they obtain and disseminate legal information. Survey results show that a majority of principals are uninformed…
Descriptors: High Schools, Principals, Knowledge Level, Legal Responsibility
Summerville, Tammy – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This was a purposeful, qualitative, historical and document-based research study that investigated the trends and outcomes of the legal issues relating to teacher dismissal for "immorality". The study included 114 cases over a 30-year period spanning from 1977-2007. Federal and state level law cases were researched to determine the ruling of…
Descriptors: Legal Problems, Role Models, Teacher Dismissal, Drug Use
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Militello, Matthew; Schimmel, David – Action in Teacher Education, 2008
This article examines how preservice and in-service teachers can be prepared to understand and implement school law. First, we report on research findings about what teachers know, do not know, and want to know about education law and where they get their information. Second, we identify the current norms, practices, and implications of preservice…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Inservice Teacher Education, Knowledge Level, School Law
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Imber, Michael – Action in Teacher Education, 2008
This article explores common misbeliefs and misconceptions that many teachers have about the law of education, focusing on those that have the greatest potential to cause harm to schools, students, and teachers themselves. The myths fall into three categories: myths concerning the legal vulnerability of schools and teachers, myths concerning the…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Misconceptions, Teachers, Knowledge Level
Teh, Mui Kim – School Business Affairs, 2009
School business officials and other education leaders worry now more than ever about facing legal battles. Maybe today's parents are more likely to run to the lawyer's office. Or maybe they simply expect everything to be a certain way--their way. Regardless, the result is the same: today's school leaders are likely to find themselves having to…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Legal Problems, Prevention, School Business Officials
McCarthy, Martha – National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP), 2008
What is the scope of First Amendment free expression rights of public school employees and students? Following a long period with no Supreme Court rulings pertaining to public employee or student speech, the Court since 2006 has delivered significant opinions in this regard. These decisions continue the trend of narrowing the circumstances under…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Freedom of Speech, Constitutional Law, Student Rights
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Schimmel, David; Militello, Matthew – Harvard Educational Review, 2007
In this article, David Schimmel and Matthew Militello document the legal knowledge and training of teachers based on a survey of more than thirteen hundred K-12 respondents in seventeen states. The findings from this study suggest that most educators (1) are uninformed or misinformed about student and teacher rights; (2) have taken no course in…
Descriptors: Teacher Rights, Elementary Secondary Education, School Law, Teacher Certification
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Reglin, Gary L. – Journal of Educational Administration, 1992
Determines whether high school educators were aware of selected legal decisions rendered by the U.S. Supreme Court that affect daily public school operations. Educators studied lacked knowledge in school finance, corporal punishment, and teacher rights. Staff development and prerequisite courses in school law should be a high priority. (12…
Descriptors: Administrators, Corporal Punishment, Educational Finance, High Schools
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Hiers, Richard H. – Journal of College and University Law, 2002
Analyzes the origins of recent federal appellate decisions' divergence from the Supreme Court's identification of teachers' or faculty's academic freedom as "a special concern of the First Amendment." Suggests ways in which academic freedom might better be accorded its rightful importance within the framework of current Supreme Court…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Court Litigation, Freedom of Speech
Worona, Jay; Fletcher, Cynthia Plumb – 1989
This article, written by two lawyers, defines defamation, discusses the basic law of defamation and stigma, and focuses on recent case law on this topic. The cases are only a sample of the numerous cases that school districts across the nation face on the issues of defamation and stigma. The following topics are included in the legal review: the…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Legal Problems, Legal Responsibility
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Zirkel, Perry A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
In 1995, members of the local teachers' association sued the Colonial School District in eastern Pennsylvania regarding a policy prohibiting political activities at official polling places on school property during nonworking hours. The court decided in the teachers' favor, declaring the policy unconstitutional. Generally, teachers' partisan…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Freedom of Speech, Professional Associations
Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1984
The Connick vs. Myers Supreme Court decision regarding public employees' right to express themselves has been applied to public schools in two recent federal court cases. The rulings suggest school boards may discipline school employees for disputes over internal office matters but must tolerate their dissent over public matters. (DCS)
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Court Litigation, Dissent, Federal Courts
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