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Mitchell, Matthew – Qualitative Research Journal, 2023
Purpose: This article develops a methodological framework to support qualitative analyses of legal texts. Scholars across the social sciences and humanities use qualitative methods to study legal phenomena but often overlook formal legal texts as productive sites for analysis. Moreover, when qualitative researchers do analyze legal texts, they…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Content Analysis, Research Methodology, Laws
Benjamin Superfine; Jonghoon Park – American Journal of Education, 2025
Purpose: Over the past 5 years, courts increasingly have considered cases involving the design and effects of selective high school admissions policies. This study examines three recent cases to highlight the importance of the courts in shaping selective high school admissions policies, how these policies have been considered in the institutional…
Descriptors: High Schools, Admission (School), Selective Admission, School Policy
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
EdChoice, 2024
Historically, private education has been an option mostly for families who could afford the cost or received financial help. Years of research have shown that many families would choose private schools and other educational resources for their children if they did not face insurmountable financial or geographical limitations. Private educational…
Descriptors: School Choice, Legal Problems, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation
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
Cullen, Hayley J.; Monds, Lauren A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Jury simulation research has been the subject of longstanding criticism in regards to ecological validity. One additional factor that has received little attention that may also impact the generalizability of this research relates to excluding participants based on their memory of, or their attention paid to, the case. In order to determine how…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Simulation, Memory, Validity
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
Amrein-Beardsley, Audrey; Close, Kevin – Educational Policy, 2021
Ongoing or recently completed across the United States are a series of lawsuits via which teacher plaintiffs are contesting how they are being evaluated using value-added models (VAMs) as part of states'/districts' teacher accountability systems. To investigate the empirical and pragmatic matters addressed in court, researchers conducted a case…
Descriptors: Value Added Models, Court Litigation, Teacher Evaluation, Reliability
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
Zirkel, Perry A. – Exceptionality, 2020
This article presents a tool for systematic consideration of the accuracy of the legal contents of publications in special education. The tool is a two-dimensional grid with one axis having three overall levels relative to legal requirements and the other axis having the three perspectives symbolized by the courtroom roles of pro-parent,…
Descriptors: Publications, Special Education, Content Analysis, Accuracy
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
Garces, Liliana M.; Marin, Patricia; Horn, Catherine L. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2021
As the fight over diversity-oriented postsecondary strategies like race-conscious admissions (commonly known as affirmative action) continues to play out in the courts with new legal cases, it is critical to better understand the ways policy actors in this arena are leveraging social science research and other types of sources in their organized…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, College Admission, Court Litigation, Admission Criteria
Ward, LaWanda W. M. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Most education and legal scholarship overlook gendered-race themes in pre-Brown v. Board of Education desegregation higher education cases that remain relevant to examining post-"Brown" race-conscious admissions cases. The author engaged critical race feminism to create a counterstory with Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher, a U.S. Supreme Court…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Feminism, Story Telling, Higher Education
Chan, Victor K. Y. – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2023
From the standpoint of a MOOC practitioner (i.e., a MOOC provider) instead of a rigorous comparative law researcher, this article attempts to analyze the potential legal issues and risks underlying instruction via MOOCs and compare these legal issues and risks between the small jurisdiction Macao and such major jurisdictions as the United States,…
Descriptors: MOOCs, Cross Cultural Studies, Laws, Privacy
King, Chula; Piotrowski, Chris – College Student Journal, 2021
In November of 2019, the National Association of the Deaf and Harvard University entered into a landmark settlement ending four years of legal battles regarding captioning in online content. In that settlement, Harvard agreed to caption new video files consistent with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 AA and to provide text-only…
Descriptors: Civil Rights Legislation, Disabilities, Federal Legislation, Accessibility (for Disabled)

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