Education in Virtual Environments

Author(s):  
Aaron Saiger

The bricks-and-mortar schools contemplated by American education law and regulation are discrete, bureaucratic institutions, where children interact in person with one another, and with adults who supervise them, inside fixed physical borders at fixed times. Their governance is likewise defined geographically. Virtual schooling, by contrast, is untethered from geography, is ubiquitously asynchronous, and involves the interaction of machine representations of people rather than of people themselves. Virtuality privileges the consumer over the bureaucrat, encourages the disaggregation and recombination of educational components on a bespoke basis, and brings different economies of scale and competitive features to the educational marketplace. The education law we have—the law of the traditional, embodied school—fits virtual technology poorly in critical respects. Virtuality demands fundamentally new legal approaches to areas as diverse as curriculum, attendance, student health and safety, privacy, parental responsibility, disability, student rights, discipline, governance, and equity. Responding to these demands provides occasion to see the law afresh, to reassess and redirect, to align principle and practice more closely, and ultimately to transform educational regulation in the service of equity and learning. This is an opportunity of a kind that has not presented itself since the beginning of the Progressive Era.

Gerontology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Helen Senderovich ◽  
Shaira Wignarajah

Virtual care (VC) continues to gain attention as we make changes to the way we deliver care amidst our current COVID-19 pandemic. Exploring various ways of delivering care is of importance as we try our best to ensure we prioritize the health and safety of every one of our patients. One mode of care that is continuing to garner attention is telemedicine – the use of virtual technology to deliver care to our patients. The geriatric population has been of particular focus during this time. As with any new intervention, it is important that both the benefits and challenges are explored to ensure that we are finding ways to accommodate the patients we serve while ensuring that they receive the care that they require. This study aims to explore the various benefits and challenges to implementing VC in our day-to-day care for the geriatric population.


Author(s):  
Fengqiao Yan ◽  
Daniel Levy

The private education law, promulgated on December 28, 2002, is China’s first national legislation on private education. The law covers all educational levels, although we are focusing on the three articles (16, 53, and 55) that cover higher education. The law’s main thrust concerning higher education is to provide a legal framework to facilitate private growth and initiate a longer process to accredit, merge, dismantle, and change institutions at that level.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (1 (3)) ◽  
pp. 59-69
Author(s):  
Danuta Kurzyna-Chmiel

The legislator considers the term “educational system” as one of the basic education laws. The legal term (included in the Education Law Act) “the educational system covers” lists its elements. They include, for example, various types of schools, kindergartens, alternative forms of preschool education, children’s holiday homes, centers of education. This system realizes recognized values, principles, as well as certain postulates and guidelines contained in the law. In essence, it is a collection of organizational units, whose activity is regulated by the Education Law Act. The majority of these activities are addressed to pupils. Some elements are also addressed to teachers and serve to develop them. Colleges of Social Service Workers do not fit in with the rest of the educational system.


2019 ◽  
pp. 396-418
Author(s):  
Lucy Jones

This chapter considers the employment law aspects of discrimination and health and safety. It discusses the meaning of the protected characteristics which were brought together under the Equality Act 2010 and considers prohibited conduct under the Act. It explains the difference between direct and indirect discrimination and when direct discrimination can be justified. The chapter discusses the difference between positive action and positive discrimination and the interaction between protected characteristics and prohibited conduct. It also explains the law relating to harassment and victimization. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the law covering health and safety in the workplace, looking at both criminal law and civil law.


1968 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 415
Author(s):  
Milton Cantor ◽  
Stephen B. Wood

2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 423-439
Author(s):  
Joanna Łukjaniuk

In the paper author made the analysis of three fundamental legal acts for the Polish education reform as regards principles and recommendations concerning educational and preventive programs. These are the law on 14 December 2016 Education Law (Oj 20017, pos. 59), Regulation of the Minister of National Education on 14 February 2017 and Regulation of the Minister of the National Education on 30 January 2018. Analysis concerns foundations and elements of the continuity as well as the presentation of the most important changes in comparison with the previous programs and emphasised deficiencies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (XIX) ◽  
pp. 67-88
Author(s):  
Magdalena Sobas

This text is about right to the education about handicapped person. Is an analylis polish legal rule perf of equality in front of the law about right to the education and international legal rule to counteract discrimination in education. This text is about changes and a new legal rule in polish education law in the last years. This changes and a new legal rule are still introduced in schools and kindergartens. Author try to indicate practical problems connected with access handicapped student to education based on case Commissioner’s for Humans Right and controls The Supreme’s Audit Office


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