NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 6 results Save | Export
Liz Chi Ani – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Twenty percent of occupational therapists are employed in schools nationwide. Despite years of service since the Brown vs. U.S. Board of Education Law was enacted in 1954, school-based occupational therapists are restricted from advancing into formal Professional Educator License leadership roles. Due to state legislation and credentialing issues,…
Descriptors: Allied Health Personnel, Occupational Therapy, Allied Health Occupations Education, School Personnel
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Soule, Sarah A.; Zylan, Yvonne – American Journal of Sociology, 1997
Relates the history of restriction of access to the Aid to Dependent Children and Aid to Families with Dependent Children programs. Examines how intrastate and interstate policies affected the enactment of work requirements for aid. Shows that intrastate politics had the greatest effect, but that policies spread among states in similar situations.…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Dependents, Disqualification, Federal State Relationship
LEAHY, MARY LEE – 1966
THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS A PROPOSAL FOR A NEW TENURE ACT FOR TEACHERS. SEVEN UNIQUE FEATURES OF THE ACT ARE NOTED--(1) IT COVERS EVERYONE EXCEPT THE ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT AND THE SUPERINTENDENT, (2) PROBATION IS LIMITED TO TWO NORMAL SCHOOL YEARS, (3) EACH PROBATIONARY EMPLOYEE IS TO RECEIVE REGULAR EVALUATION REPORTS AND IS TO HAVE A CHANCE TO…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Costs, Discipline, Disqualification
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Johnson, Frederick G. – School Law Bulletin, 1979
Examines the employment status of a nonprofessional school employee with reference to the procedural steps that a school administrative unit should use in dismissing him. The focus is on North Carolina case law, but the issues and the conclusions drawn are applicable to other states. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Dismissal (Personnel), Disqualification, Due Process
King, Richard A. – 1977
Causes for the dismissal of teachers, which have traditionally been judged to be within the discretionary power of school boards, have been closely scrutinized in recent court decisions. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution has been interpreted in recent litigation concerning faculty hiring, evaluation, and…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Court Litigation, Dismissal (Personnel), Disqualification
Corson, Walter; And Others – 1986
A study examined the various laws and practices in six states regarding nonmonetary eligibility for state unemployment insurance programs and assessed the effects of these laws and policies on the states' ability to identify and reject unemployment insurance claimants who fail to meet the requirements. Eligibility for unemployment insurance in all…
Descriptors: Audits (Verification), Comparative Analysis, Compliance (Legal), Data Collection