By Allison Dunn | March 25, 2022
Despite a Maine school district dropping its mask mandate, a federal judge overseeing a challenge to the policy has refused to dismiss the case as moot, citing the potential for the district to reinstate the mandate at a later date.
By Allison Dunn | March 23, 2022
The Massachusetts Supreme Court sided with an assistant principal on Friday, rejecting a "habitually truant" youth's claim that the non-attorney school representative engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by filing and pursuing a Child Requiring Assistance petition in juvenile court.
By Marianna Wharry | March 21, 2022
A Virginia student may proceed with a lawsuit asserting his public high school violated his rights by suspending him for discussing the 2018 Parkland, Florida, school shooting, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has ruled.
By Michael A. Mora | March 17, 2022
Greenberg Traurig was pitted against Kluger, Kaplan, Silverman, Katzen & Levine and William Petros Law at the Third District Court of Appeal.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | March 7, 2022
Attorneys argued that quasi-judicial immunity does not apply to the disciplinary proceedings of nongovernment entities, such as Yale.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 2, 2022
Judge Thomas Ambro dismissed complaints from medically vulnerable students and their parents against two Allegheny County school districts Tuesday, agreeing with the defendants that the county's low COVID transmission levels render the plaintiffs' challenge to the schools' masking policies moot.
By Allison Dunn | March 2, 2022
A former student will be able to proceed in a lawsuit against Stockton University for allegations that the school failed to accommodate his mental health disability, the New Jersey Appellate Division ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | February 28, 2022
Pratter did not choose to establish a more stringent standard—that the student prove "but for" causation—that would make Title IX retaliation cases harder to prove.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | February 18, 2022
The student, who has learning disabilities, transferred to the Washington, Connecticut, school, which has a $66,523 tuition for boarding students.
By Ryan Dailey | February 18, 2022
Critics have dubbed the proposal the "don't say gay" bill, a moniker that Democrats said the bill has earned.
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