Selected Product: | The Law of Higher Education Student Edit Edition: 4 Author: William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee Publisher: Jossey-Bass Release Date: 2007-07-20 ISBN-10: 0787970956 ISBN-13: 9780787970956 List Price: $90.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association ISBN-10: 1557987912 ISBN-13: 9781557987914 List Price:$27.95 American Higher Education in the Twenty-First Century: Social, Political, and Economic Challenges ISBN-10: 0801880351 ISBN-13: 9780801880353 List Price:$29.00 Student Development in College: Theory, Research, and Practice (Jossey Bass Higher and Adult Education Series) ISBN-10: 0787909254 ISBN-13: 9780787909253 List Price:$45.00 How Colleges Work: The Cybernetics of Academic Organization and Leadership (Jossey Bass Higher and Adult Education Series) ISBN-10: 155542354X ISBN-13: 9781555423544 List Price:$37.00 The Rights and Responsibilities of the Modern University: Who Assumes the Risks of College Life? ISBN-10: 0890896755 ISBN-13: 9780890896754 List Price:$25.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Law of Higher Education by William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee (ISBN-10: 0787970956, ISBN-13: 9780787970956). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Law of Higher Education by William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee (ISBN-10: 0787970956, ISBN-13: 9780787970956). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Based on the fourth edition of The Law of Higher Education—the indispensable guide to law that bears on the provision of higher education—this Student Edition provides an up-to-date reference and guide for coursework in higher education law. It also provides a guide for programs that help prepare higher education administrators for leadership roles. This important reference is organized into five main parts Perspectives and Foundations; The College and Its Governing Board and Staff; The College and Its Faculty; The College and Its Students; and The College and the Outside World. Each part includes the sections of the full fourth edition that most relate to student interests and are most suitable for classroom instruction, for example: - The evolution and reach of higher education law
- The governance of higher education
- Legal planning and dispute resolution
- The interrelationships between law and policy
- The college and its employees
- Faculty employment and tenure
- Academic freedom
- Campus issues: student safety, racial and sexual harassment, affirmative action, computer networks, services for international students
- Student misconduct
- Freedom of speech, hate speech
- Student rights, responsibilities, and activities fees
- Athletics and Title IX
- Copyright
Good overview of legal issues | Customer Rating: | | This book provides a broad overview of the legal issues in higher education. It discusses relevant cases and handles the complexities of federal and state legal issues in a way that is student friendly. While it does assume some basic understanding of the legal system, the appendices are helpful resources that can assist with that necessary background for students new to law. | Expensive but very thorough | Customer Rating: | | This is an outstanding book on higher education law. Lots of case examples and descriptions. A little repetative at some points, but I suppose that is true about law in general. Not even as dry as one might think about a 2 volume law book set. | A Must-Have for University Administrators | Customer Rating: | Kaplin & Lee's "The Law of Higher Education (Third Edition)" was the required text for a graduate course, "Legal Aspects of Higher Education" and should be present on the bookshelf of any university administrator. The book's subtitle, "A Comprehensive Guide to Legal Implications of Administrative Decision Making," is wholly accurate in describing the scope and utility of this massive tome (over 1,000 pages from cover to cover).
The book is a valuable investment on a number of fronts, not the least of which is the paucity of comparable texts on this complex topic. "The Law of Higher Education" begins with an overview of postsecondary education law and continues with an interesting organization that considers the college and its various constituencies -- "The College and Trustees, Administrators, and Staff," "The College and the Faculty," "The College and the Students," "The College and the Community," "The College and the State Government," "The College and the Federal Government," "The College and the Educational Associations," and "The College and the Business/Industrial Community." Each chapter is further broken down into key arenas (for example, in the chapter on students, a few of the topics include admissions, financial aid, disciplinary rules and regulations, and athletics). Each topic includes a context and is connected to numerous examples from case law. Despite the high degree of legal terminology, the book is readable for the layperson. There are separate indices for subject, statute, and cases that make it easy to locate relevant information.
This book is an excellent treatment of the enormously complex field of high education law. |
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