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Full-Text Articles in Education Law
Current Medico-Legal Issues In Workers' Compensation, Dean Hashimoto
Current Medico-Legal Issues In Workers' Compensation, Dean Hashimoto
Dean M. Hashimoto
Opportunity Lost: Teachers’ Union Reform - Past, Present & Future, Edward C. Klein Iii
Opportunity Lost: Teachers’ Union Reform - Past, Present & Future, Edward C. Klein Iii
Edward C Klein III
Teachers’ unions, in their current form, truly took shape in the tumult of the 1960’s. Built upon the model of industrial unionism first codified in the private sector with the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, and later extended to the public sector through state law, teachers’ unions simultaneously embraced the language of the Civil Rights movement and the classic labor-management dichotomy. Thus, teachers’ unions have come to be a powerful influence on American public education for over 50 years, representing approximately three-quarters of all public school teachers today.
However, the direction of teacher’s unions has not always been clear, …
A Law Too Far? The Wisconsin Budget Repair Act: Counterpoint, Ralph Mawdsley, Charles Russo, James Mawdsley
A Law Too Far? The Wisconsin Budget Repair Act: Counterpoint, Ralph Mawdsley, Charles Russo, James Mawdsley
Charles J. Russo
This article encourages debate regarding the power and force of teacher unions and collective bargaining and their impact on the quality of education. As an initial matter, it is important to keep in mind that the authors of this Counterpoint start with the premise that the purpose of employee unions, whether in education, the automobile industry, or other fields aside, is to save the jobs of members. In education, our argument is that taking care of students has decidedly taken a back seat, and thus, we find it frustrating to hear that teachers “want this for the children” when, in …