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Silvia Sierra-Martínez; Irene Crestar; Isabel Fernández-Menor; Ángeles Parrilla Latas – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
Defining educational inclusion is a complex task on which there is still no conceptual agreement among practitioners. Although the term inclusion has moved away from integration or disability, it has not yet been consolidated as the presence and participation of all students. Some of the reasons are lack of material and human resources, isolated…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Inclusion, Discourse Analysis, Student Participation
Sheng-Ju Chan – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Private higher education (PHE) in Taiwan, similar to other East Asian systems, is a distinct sector that has played several significant roles. It experienced growth and prosperity during the massification of the entire higher education system. However, a multitude of emerging circumstances has ushered in dramatic changes and crises, impacting not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Colleges, Higher Education, Educational Change
Jiayu Zhang – European Journal of Education, 2025
The excessive restrictions on the resignation rights of public university teachers, especially high-level talents, have affected the rights and interests of the legal flow of talent. Whether the employment contract can continue to be performed, whether the service period and the liquidated damages clause violate the provisions of the 'Labour…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Rights, Foreign Countries
K. T. Matthew Seah – Review of Education, 2025
For medical educators, autoethnography as a research methodology provides a means of active engagement in reflective practice, ranging from teaching and educational innovation to interactions with patients and colleagues. In this way, they may benefit from the systematic reflexivity required, improve their interactions with the people around them,…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Medical Education, Ethics
Nathan L. Essex – Pearson, 2025
"School Law and the Public Schools: A Practical Guide for Educational Leaders" provides comprehensive, practical information on relevant topics that impact the organization and administration of public schools. Students learn how to apply specific legal knowledge to real issues of daily life in the classroom and school through…
Descriptors: School Law, Legal Problems, Public Schools, School Administration
Olivier Leclerc – Research Evaluation, 2025
Detecting and punishing violations of research integrity requires first having to prove them. However, establishing proof of research misconduct presents a number of challenges. Firstly, it has to be conducted in a variety of contexts, including before research integrity officers, university disciplinary committees, civil courts, criminal courts,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Research, Identification, Integrity
Gavin Duffy; Gareth Robinson; Michelle Templeton – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
This paper offers analysis of the policy drivers and legal frameworks associated with school exclusion in Northern Ireland. This activity is timely given limited analysis in this area in recent decades. The research is an element of an UK-wide, multi-strand, ESRC Large Grant project, examining the Political Economies of School Exclusion and their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Legal Problems
Antonis Katsiyannis; Luke J. Rapa; Julia D. Piotrowski; Elizabeth Alexandrou – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2025
In 2019, about 22% of U.S. students ages 12-18 reported being bullied, with a higher percentage of female students than male students reporting victimization. Recent empirical reports indicate that students with disabilities are more likely to experience bullying and be punished for bullying. Bullying has been linked to increased risk for…
Descriptors: Bullying, Legal Problems, Secondary School Students, Victims
Yin Kiong Hoh – American Biology Teacher, 2025
Stem cell therapy, a cutting-edge technology, aims to replace damaged cells with healthy ones. Stem cells possess the remarkable ability to multiply and differentiate into various cell types, making them ideal candidates for regenerative medicine. This therapy holds promise for treating a wide range of conditions and injuries. In this review, I…
Descriptors: Embryology, Biotechnology, Biomedicine, Cytology
Christine Ladwig; Dana Schwieger; Reshmi Mitra – Information Systems Education Journal, 2025
The rapid rise of AI use is creating some very serious legal and ethical issues such as bias, discrimination, inequity, privacy violations, and--as creators everywhere fear--theft of protected intellectual property. Because AI platforms "learn" by scraping training materials available online or what is provided to them through their…
Descriptors: Copyrights, Plagiarism, Intellectual Property, Computer Software
Shuangjiao Wu; Mansour Amini; Omer Hassan Ali Mahfoodh – Eurasian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2025
Research on modality shifts in English-to-Chinese courtroom translation remains limited, despite the critical role of modality in shaping legal nuance, and speaker intentionality in judicial settings. This gap is particularly consequential in high-stakes contexts such as the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE), where…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Court Litigation, Chinese, English
Xuan Meng; Andrew Horrell; Paul McMillan – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
Nation-states have concerns about the health and wellbeing of their citizens and these concerns have directly or indirectly influenced educational reform and curriculum development. In 2000, China issued a directive of 'Health First' which applied to all elements of the education system. In its scale and scope, this represented a significant and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Legal Problems, Ethics, Curriculum Development
OECD Publishing, 2025
In 2014, enrolment rates in primary and secondary education in Côte d'Ivoire were alarmingly low, and the enrolment gap between girls and boys was particularly large. Following the passing of a landmark law in 2015 which made primary and lower secondary education compulsory, enrolment rates drastically improved in primary and secondary education.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Legal Problems, Educational Policy
Marybeth Gasman – Teachers College Press, 2025
With a personal and narrative style, preeminent educational historian Marybeth Gasman presents her research pertaining to HBCUs conducted over her 25-year career. In addition to conducting historical and large-scale qualitative studies related to HBCUs, Gasman has also served as a board of trustee member at three HBCUs--Paul Quinn College, St.…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, African American Education, Educational History, African American History
Institute for College Access & Success, 2025
Institutional debt, also referred to as direct-to-school debt, is debt owed by students to their college or university for unpaid tuition, fees, room and board, education benefit overpayments, or fines. Unpaid tuition is the most common debt and can arise if a student enrolled with the expectation of aid that did not come through, or if a student…
Descriptors: State Universities, Debt (Financial), Institutional Characteristics, Paying for College
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