V ideo practice area
Discrimination in Education
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
Special Education
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
Title VI
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
LGBTQ Student Discrimination
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
Healthcare Law Is Growing
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
What is health law?
Consecte adipiscing elitsed eiusmod
What Is an Insurance Defense Attorney?
Protecting policyholders
Insurance must pay
Comply with regulations
- Automobile third party liability
- Uninsured and underinsured motorist claims
- First-party wage and medical coverage
- Property and homeowners claims
- Premises liability
- Products liability
- Professional liability
- Employment Law
- Construction
- Medical malpractice
- Municipal Law
- Legal malpractice
Bentin Ali Benilmal
Phasellus ac consequat turpis, sit amet fermentum nulla. Donec dignissim augue nunc. Praesent bibendu erat ac lectus molestie lobortis curabitur ultrices justo.
Workers' Compensation
- Wage replacement benefits
- Medical treatment
- Vocational rehabilitation
- Other benefits
Other Services
Questions and Answers Related to Education Law
Universities are autonomous in law and make their own rules, regulations, procedures, statutes, ordinances and policies. The primary legal relationship between a student and a university is one of public law and contract law. This was established in a case decided by the Court of Appeal in 2000 – Clarke v University of Lincolnshire and Humberside.
Some of the laws covering educational rights are:
The Education Act 1996 – s.19 of the Act places an absolute, non-delegable duty on Local Authorities to provide education to children of compulsory school age.
The Education Act 2002 – Section 175 of the Act sets out the safeguarding duty of state schools and colleges (for independent schools, safeguarding is covered by the Education (Independent School Standards) Regulations 2014, while for Special Schools, the relevant legislation is the Non-Maintained Special Schools (England) Regulations 2015).
The Children and Families Act 2014 – This legislation introduced Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) to help get education, health care and social care services working together more effectively to meet young people’s needs.
The Equality Act 2010 – Providing protection from discrimination on the basis of protected characteristics, such as disability, sex, race and sexual orientation.
For independent schools, parents’ and pupils’ educational rights will also be defined by the terms of the contracts that parents sign with the schools
There are all sorts of issues parents and pupils can run into with their educational institution. The most common revolve around a school failing to provide sufficient support for a child’s educational needs (especially where a child has an EHCP), bullying, school admissions and exclusions and school complaints.