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Powers, Jeanne M.; Chapman, Kathryn P. – Teachers College Record, 2021
Background: In the past decade, the laws governing teachers' employment have been at the center of legal and political conflicts across the United States. Vergara v. California challenged five California state statutes that provide employment protections for teachers. In June 2014, a California lower court declared the statutes unconstitutional…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, State Legislation, Teacher Dismissal, Teacher Effectiveness
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Gottlieb, Jessica J.; Hutt, Ethan L.; Superfine, Benjamin M. – Educational Policy, 2020
In 2012, families in California filed a lawsuit alleging that five state statutes governing teacher tenure, dismissal, and seniority together violate the state constitution's requirements for equal protection. Central to the case were competing narratives about the relationship between these statutes, the work of teachers, and the achievement of…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Personnel Policy, State Legislation, Teacher Dismissal
Paige, Mark; Cote, Felicia; Allmendinger, James – Phi Delta Kappan, 2016
The focus on using the courts to abolish tenure is a distraction from the important work of improving teacher quality. Unfortunately, the recent decision of Vergara v. California has only perpetuated the mistaken notion that only after tenure is abolished can underperforming teachers be removed. But the authors contend that administrators,…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Dismissal, Court Litigation, Tenure
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Superfine, Benjamin Michael; Thompson, Alea R. – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
In "Vergara v. California" (2014), a trial-level court ruled that California laws governing teacher tenure and dismissal were unconstitutional. This study analyzes "Vergara" in light of the shifting use of the courts to promote equal educational opportunities and the changing power bases of educational interest groups,…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Policy, Politics of Education, Educational Change
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Levinson, Meira; Theisen-Homer, Victoria – Theory and Research in Education, 2015
This article combines original interviews, secondary policy analysis, and non-ideal theory to determine the "least unjust" approach to budget-driven "Reduction in Force" teacher firings in Los Angeles. Building from the a priori claim that schools should serve children's interests, this article addresses the following…
Descriptors: Interviews, School Policy, Policy Analysis, Teacher Dismissal
Research Institute for Higher Education, Hiroshima University, 2013
In contrast with that basic understanding of university autonomy, in most continental European countries, such as France, and also in Japan, the government has tightly controlled universities, in terms of both their organization and activities. In these countries, the concept of "governance" is often lacking, as institutions were not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Governance, Universities
EdSource, 2011
In an attempt to increase the effectiveness of instruction in California's public schools, educators, policymakers, and researchers are looking for ways to boost the quality of teacher evaluations. This report explains the complex relationship between state policy on teacher evaluation and local practice. It also describes prevailing criticisms of…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Instructional Effectiveness, Public Schools, Tenure
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White, Edward M. – College English, 2010
The author has twice spent a full day in court, as an expert witness; rather an odd task for an English professor, one might think. Each time involved a matter of considerable importance: an obscenity prosecution of a classic novel during the 1960s, and then, about twenty years later, a financial crisis at a community college involving dozens of…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, College Faculty, English Teachers, Values
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Papay, John P.; Johnson, Susan Moore – Educational Policy, 2012
Peer Assistance and Review (PAR) is a local labor-management initiative designed to improve teacher quality. In PAR, expert "consulting teachers" mentor, support, and evaluate novice and underperforming veteran teachers. Evaluations under PAR can lead to dismissals. The authors examine the costs and benefits of PAR, both financial and…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Teacher Effectiveness, Peer Evaluation, Teacher Evaluation
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Goldstein, Jennifer – Teachers College Record, 2009
Background/Context: Peer Assistance and Review (PAR), or peer review as it has historically been called, has existed in a handful of school districts since the early 1980s. In 1999, California became the first state to pass PAR legislation; at that time, a major district had not implemented the policy in over a decade. Setting: This is an in-depth…
Descriptors: Evaluators, Teacher Evaluation, Program Implementation, Accountability
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Weiler, Kathleen – History of Education Quarterly, 2007
The introduction of a loyalty oath for professors at the University of California was part of the nationwide search for political subversives in all key institutions in the late 1940s and early 1950s. By the early 1950s, the panic over political subversives that led to the imposition of a loyalty oath at the University of California had spilled…
Descriptors: Females, State Universities, Educational History, Women Faculty
National Council on Teacher Quality, 2010
The 2009 "State Teacher Policy Yearbook" provided a comprehensive review of states' policies that impact the teaching profession. As a companion to last year's comprehensive state-by-state analysis, the 2010 edition provides each state with an individualized "Blueprint for Change," building off last year's "Yearbook"…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Policy, Teacher Evaluation
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Rensch, Steven R. – Southern California Law Review, 1974
It is the thesis of this note that California's teacher removal statutes foreclose that degree of teacher classroom flexibility which is necessary to achieve the state's educational goals and which is required by the first amendment. (Author)
Descriptors: Education, Legal Problems, Personnel Policy, State Legislation
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Fleming, Thomas – Journal of Law and Education, 1978
Examines recent California court cases that deal with the problem of public and private morality, and with homosexuality. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Homosexuality, Moral Issues
EdSource, 2005
Proposition 74 on the Nov. 8, 2005 ballot would change employment terms for certificated school employees, such as teachers, school librarians, counselors, nurses, and instructional specialists. Because the largest population affected is teachers, most discussions of the ballot measure--also known as the teacher tenure or Put Kids First…
Descriptors: State Legislation, State Standards, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Competencies
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