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Toby, Jackson; Scrupski, Adam – School Safety, 1991
An effective program to cope with student misbehavior should include a range of sanctions. Proposes that the juvenile justice system and school districts work together to develop an intermediate punishment of coerced community service for serious disciplinary infractions. (MLF)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Delinquency, Discipline, Elementary Secondary Education
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Bhirdo, Kelly W.; And Others – Journal of College and University Law, 1989
As a penalty for violations, the NCAA cancelled SMU's football program for 1987 and limited the 1988 season. An alumnus filed a class action alleging antitrust violations of price-fixing and group boycott. Issues of antitrust standing, violation and state action, and the court's handling of these issues are discussed. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Civil Rights, College Athletics, Court Litigation, Football
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Schuster, Jack H. – Academe, 1991
The American Association of University Professors' (AAUP) new policy authorizing sanctions against colleges when investigation discloses serious departures from accepted governance norms is examined. Issues discussed include the existence and general relevance of governance norms, evidence of violation of those standards, and the AAUP's right to…
Descriptors: Agency Role, College Faculty, Discipline Policy, Governance
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Nelson, H. Wayne; And Others – Gerontologist, 1995
Assessed the relationship between the presence of Oregon volunteer long-term care ombudsmen and externally handled abuse complaints, survey reports, and regulatory sanctions. Found presence of ombudsmen was related to increased abuse reporting and abuse complaint substantiation, more survey deficiencies, and higher sanction activity. (JBJ)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Elder Abuse, Long Term Care, Nursing Homes
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Bell-Elkins, Julie – About Campus, 2002
Framingham State College's response to alcohol-related incidents emphasizes one-on-one interaction with students and campus-community collaboration. The policy, which was introduced in 1985 and continues to evolve, has vastly reduced the number of repeat alcohol-related offenses. (BF)
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Alcoholic Beverages, College Environment, College Students
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Robinson-Zanartu, Carol; Pena, Elizabeth D.; Cook-Morales, Valerie; Pena, Anna M.; Afshani, Rosalyn; Nguyen, Lynda – School Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Academic dishonesty and its consequences have become increasingly complex. Highly accessible electronic media, profound consequences for misconduct and reporting, and lack of standard practice intensify the issues. We surveyed 270 faculty members to determine whether they had been confronted with plagiarism and if they felt prepared to deal with…
Descriptors: Punishment, Faculty, Plagiarism, Teacher Attitudes
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Workman, Jane E.; Freeburg, Elizabeth W.; Lentz-Hees, Elizabeth S. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2004
This study identifies and evaluates sanctions for dress code violations in secondary school handbooks. Sanctions, or consequences for breaking rules, vary along seven interrelated dimensions: source, formality, retribution, obtrusiveness, magnitude, severity, and pervasiveness. A content analysis of handbooks from 155 public secondary schools…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Dress Codes, Secondary Schools, Guides
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Flint, Colin – Journal of Geography, 2002
Have you voted? Have you sung the national anthem recently? Have you objected to racial or sexual discrimination? Have you worn a political button or participated in a political rally? Have you turned a blind eye? Have you thought about the impact of US sanctions and air patrols on Iraq? Have you decided not to? Whether the answer is yes or no to…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Sexual Harassment, Human Geography, Political Divisions (Geographic)
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Wishon, Phillip – Young Children, 2004
In this article, the author discusses racial and school segregation with the Plessy vs. Ferguson case, as well as the Brown vs. Board of Education case as an example. The Plessy case deals with Louisiana's separate car law, wherein a 30-year-old apprentice shoemaker named Homer Plessy, who was 1/8 Negro, was arrested for sitting in the Whites-only…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, School Segregation, Sanctions, Racial Segregation
Morrison Institute for Public Policy, Arizona State University, 2008
This brief, the third issue in the "Criminal Justice Issues for Arizona" series, reveals that Pinal County's specialized court for domestic-violence cases offers some promising results for dealing with this common and complex offense. This report contains an analysis of data collected in the Pinal County Domestic Violence Database, which…
Descriptors: Case Records, Family Violence, Courts, Criminals
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Snyder, Lori Unruh; Gallo, Maria; Fulford, Stephen G.; Irani, Tracy; Rudd, Rick; DiFino, Sharon M.; Durham, Timothy C. – Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2008
Genetically modified (GM) crops such as maize (Zea mays L.), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), soybean [Glycine max (L.) Moench], and canola (Brassica rapa L.) have been widely adopted by American farmers. In spite of their use in the United States, the European Union (EU) imposed a 6-year de facto moratorium (1998-2004) on the cultivation/import of…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Sanctions, Biotechnology, Unions
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Whitman, David – Education Next, 2008
By the time youngsters reach high school in the United States, the achievement gap is immense. Some remarkable inner-city schools, however, are showing that the achievement gap can be closed, even at the middle and high school level, if poor minority kids are given the right kind of instruction. In this article, the author features six schools…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Disadvantaged, Academic Achievement, Cultural Context
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Heinrichs, Terry – American Journal of Education, 2008
Raphael Cohen-Almagor's article "Hate in the Classroom: Free Expression, Holocaust Denial, and Liberal Education" (2008) calls for sanctions on those K-12 public school teachers whose deployment of "hate speech"--and/or associations with others who deploy it--creates a "poisoned environment" in the classroom. While…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Schools, Public School Teachers
Bathon, Justin M.; Spradlin, Terry E. – Center for Evaluation and Education Policy, Indiana University, 2007
Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) is the single largest federal investment in K-12 education, supplying over $12.7 billion annually in funding to the states (Government Accountability Office [GAO], 2004). In particular, Title I of the ESEA, which was first passed by the U.S. Congress in 1965, provides federal funds to…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Elementary Secondary Education, Low Income, Federal Legislation
Bathon, Justin M.; Spradlin, Terry E. – Center for Evaluation and Education Policy, Indiana University, 2007
Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) is the single largest federal investment in K-12 education, supplying over $12.7 billion annually in funding to the states. Although not all schools are identified as Title I schools, all public schools are subject to certain accountability provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, School Choice
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