By Jane Wester | May 19, 2022
In-person teaching was "promised and expected by the parties," said a lawyer for a student seeking a tuition refund.
By Jason Grant | August 26, 2021
The students' federal suit focused on what they said was the school system's "pervasive and systemic failure to take appropriate and legally mandated actions" generally, and in their own instances, after students across the city report sexual assaults.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Eugene R. Barnosky, Lindsay T. Crocker, Joel M. Markowitz and Michelle A. Mahabirsingh | July 15, 2021
The potentially conflicting interests of schools and their students are to be balanced on both sides of the gate, while the bar appears decidedly higher for schools in the off-campus setting.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Ameer Benno | July 9, 2021
Requiring students to take a COVID-19 vaccine while they are still in EUA status violates the law.
By Jason Grant | April 7, 2021
"While the penalty of suspension is very harsh, it is not shockingly disproportionate to the offense," wrote the Appellate Division, First Department.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Black and Sarah E. Child | March 11, 2021
As the New York State Education Department moves to finalize regulations relating to the substantial equivalence of instruction in nonpublic schools, First Amendment challenges appear likely to follow.
By Jane Wester | February 11, 2021
The student, who was identified in the complaint only by her initials, is represented by Mariann Wang of Cuti Hecker Wang, who wrote that her client was 14 years old when she was offered a scholarship to the ninth grade at Dalton.
By Jane Wester | January 29, 2021
Petitioners argued that New York's rules surrounding vaccinations and school attendance violated their constitutional rights.
By Jason Grant | August 12, 2020
As a chemistry teacher at Manhattan's Beacon High School "poured methanol from a gallon jug" into dishes containing nitrates, "a giant fireball erupted ... and engulfed" the student, and he burned for at least a minute, wrote the judge.
By Jason Grant | July 16, 2020
The suit contends that Trump administration Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has replaced an Obama-era rule with one that "drastically" limits repayment defenses for borrowers who find themselves saddled with large amounts of debt after a for-profit school has deceived them.
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