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Prescott, Peter; Buttrick, Hilary; Skinner, Deborah – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2014
For most professors, dealing with academic integrity issues ranks alongside grading and committee work as one of the most unpopular faculty responsibilities. Confronting the perpetrator can be unpleasant. It can also create significant intangible costs for the accusing professor, not the least of which are stress-induced sleepless nights and a…
Descriptors: Ethics, Peer Influence, College Faculty, Social Influences
Vance Vaughn – School Leadership Review, 2014
School districts and campuses throughout the nation are working around the clock to avoid an unacceptable accountability rating under the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001. In Texas the label has recently changed to "Improvement Required." An "Improvement Required" label forces districts and campuses into the Texas…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation, School Districts, Sanctions
Lee, Scott – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2013
It is seldom useful to try to persuade staff to abandon coercive methods in the moment when they are angry or frustrated with students. Instead, these topics can be discussed during new employee orientation and in ongoing staff development. Ironically, many staff members share that in their own roles as parents they seldom rely on spanking or…
Descriptors: Intervention, Caring, Brain, Sanctions
Linhorst, Donald M.; Dirks-Linhorst, P. Ann; Groom, Ralph – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 2012
This study compares the characteristics of two groups of probationers ordered to jail-based substance-abuse treatment as an intermediate sanction. It further reviews rearrest and probation failure outcomes of the two groups, along with the demographic, clinical, and criminal factors associated with those outcomes. Probationers jailed for probation…
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Sanctions, Recidivism, Law Enforcement
Weaver, Heather A. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2012
When we look in depth at how the experience of education was represented in American culture, we find evidence of visual tropes representing evolving but persistent aspects of the experience of schooling, such as the performance of judgement, and the desire to know the world. These tropes were rendered in terms of pictorial conventions that went…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Films, Educational History, Semiotics
Shapira-Lishchinsky, Orly – Religious Education, 2012
This study attempts to describe Jewish teachers' perceptions about their ethical dilemmas based on stories derived from the Bible. Sixty teachers were asked to submit descriptions of their ethical dilemmas to the study website; submissions were then discussed in focus groups. The findings were grouped by the ATLAS.ti into five categories: Telling…
Descriptors: Jews, Sanctions, Focus Groups, Judaism
Kelly, Peter; Hickey, Christopher – Asia-Pacific Journal of Health, Sport and Physical Education, 2012
In 2007 the elite Australian Rules footballer Ben Cousins was suspended by the Australian Football League for 12 months for "bringing the game into disrepute". Cousins was the first, and at the time of writing, the only player to be suspended by the AFL for actions and behaviors that were claimed to be damaging to the reputation of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Reputation, Audiences, Industry
Neophytou, Lefkios – Educational Review, 2013
This paper focuses on the notion of educational reform and discusses Emotional Intelligence (EI) in the context of the modernist-postmodernist debate. It is argued that through the application of EI into contemporary societies a new wave of reform emerges that provides science with normative power over the emotional world of individuals. This…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Sanctions, Rewards, Educational Change
Bray, Nathaniel J.; Braxton, John M. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2012
Codes of conduct can and should fulfill a critical role in higher education. Codes help overcome some of the challenges inherent in a system predicated on high levels of autonomy and on self-regulation. Codes not only are important indicators of critical topics that are deemed worthy of explicit protection or expectations for behavior; they may…
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Higher Education, College Administration, College Faculty
Zehr, Mary Ann – Education Week, 2011
Over the past two decades or so, a majority of states have implemented policies that link teenagers' driver's licenses to school attendance, academic performance, or behavior, but those requirements are not backed by solid research evidence. Experts trace the start of the trend to 1988, when West Virginia enacted a law linking driving privileges…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Adolescents, Attendance, Academic Achievement
Shea, Kathryn Elizabeth – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Compliance with NCAA DI rules matters. The leaders of the NCAA, colleges and universities devise, negotiate and elect NCAA rules to address recurring problems. Despite these efforts, schools continue to violate NCAA rules. The objective intent of a rule is to affect a change in behavior; if behavior does not change, then the rule is ineffective.…
Descriptors: Compliance (Legal), Team Sports, College Athletics, Males
Frankowski, Andrea; van der Steen, Martijn; Bressers, Daphne; Schulz, Martin; Shewbridge, Claire; Fuster, Marc; Rouw, Rien – OECD Publishing, 2018
Prepared for a Strategic Education Governance learning seminar, this working paper analyses the ways in which the Dutch government tried to reach overarching goals in education, in a system characterised by a high degree of distributed autonomy of education institutions and the participation of multiple actors, and consequently a government highly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education, Mathematics Achievement, Science Achievement
Hüther, Otto; Krücken, Georg – European Journal of Higher Education, 2013
For more than 20 years, new public management (NPM) has been the guiding governance model of university reforms in Europe. One central aspect of this governance model is to strengthen the hierarchy within the universities. Recent research shows that the formal decision-making authority of university leaders and deans has increased in almost every…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Educational Change, Educational Administration, Deans
National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 2012
This brief describes key features of the high school alcohol and drug policies in the 100 largest school districts in the United States. The written policies of at least 80% of these districts include parent conferences, referral to law enforcement, principal-determined suspensions, or referral for expulsion hearings (or some combination of these)…
Descriptors: School Districts, High Schools, School Policy, Discipline Policy
Mokula, Lebeloane Lazarus Donald; Lovemore, Nyaumwe – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2014
The present study narrated the forms, factors and consequences of cheating in university examinations by UNISA Open and Distance learning students from anecdotal data. The results showed that the perpetrators mostly used crib materials on paper, ruler and calculator cover. The factors that influenced examination cheating were gender, age range and…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Open Education, Cheating, College Students

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