By Phillip Bantz | March 31, 2021
Pamela Connelly left her prior in-house role at the University of Pittsburgh last year and returned to private practice. But she couldn't stay away from the in-house world and academia for long.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Samuel Hornak | March 30, 2021
In recent years the Pennsylvania courts have issued several major decisions setting the standard for public access to records containing the private information of students and teachers.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Katheryn Tucker | February 11, 2021
"The defense of this lawsuit never questioned the extent of the tragedy. Rather, the school sought to demonstrate that it did everything in its power to support Abbie and acted responsibly by providing her the opportunity to seek additional care, and we're grateful that several court rulings have now affirmed that," said defense attorney Jarad W. Handelman of Elliott Greenleaf in Harrisburg.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Katheryn Tucker | February 4, 2021
The Philadelphia lawyers who won a $2.5 million judgment for a student who was raped during a study abroad program said the case sets precedent for responsibility of schools and colleges to provide safe accommodations for international travel.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Camille Bryant | November 13, 2020
With the continued rise of AI, this article highlights three key legal issues that school administrators should be mindful of from a human resources perspective.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Joshua Drew and Stephen A. Miller | October 19, 2020
The coronavirus pandemic's dramatic impact on college athletics is, as one observer put it, driving "a forced modernization of the NCAA" and raising significant questions about the NCAA's future.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leigh E. Dalton | October 15, 2020
The landscape of education did not escape and its profile is also impacted by these COVID-19 dynamics—on the one hand forcing parents and students out of their comfort zones, routines, and preferences, and on the other, ushering in a new genre of school choice.
By Amanda Bronstad | October 5, 2020
Several judges have come out with the first rulings from among hundreds of class actions seeking refunds for university and college tuition and fees tied to the COVID-19 shutdowns. Most of them have refused to dismiss claims of breach of contract.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Christopher D. Carusone and Kate Emert Gleason | September 28, 2020
Despite expectations that the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) would release new Title IX regulations last fall, the final version of the new Title IX rule was not issued until half a year later on May 6, amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mag Bickford, Camille Bryant and Kathy Conklin | September 23, 2020
With a particularly contentious election season at fever pitch, many school administrators long for an educational atmosphere completely void of potentially controversial speech, but a quick glance at the First Amendment should quash dreams of being able to prohibit all political speech in the school setting.
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