College Admissions and Admissions Testing in a Time of Transformational Change

College Admissions and Admissions Testing in a Time of Transformational Change
Author: Kurt F. Geisinger
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2022-12-30
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1000828603

Perhaps no topic in higher education is more controversial than admissions, whether it be to a prestigious college, graduate schools, or professional schools. In response to the pandemic and a host of race relations issues in the country, many colleges and universities have changed their policies regarding admissions testing. In this foundational volume, renowned chapter authors address a diverse set of themes related to college admissions, examining new perspectives, exploring the strengths and weaknesses of current practices, and discussing how institutions might use different techniques to attract diverse students, particularly those who have not traditionally attended college. Experts in college admission testing, admissions research, and psychology come together to provide empirically based approaches and ideas. Ultimately, this volume advances a future in college admissions where more students are able to succeed in college and beyond.

Backlash Against the ADA

Backlash Against the ADA
Author: Linda Hamilton Krieger
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 417
Release: 2010-02-22
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 047202549X

For civil rights lawyers who toiled through the 1980s in the increasingly barren fields of race and sex discrimination law, the approval of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990 by a nearly unanimous U.S. House and Senate and a Republican President seemed almost fantastic. Within five years of the Act's effective date, however, observers were warning of an unfolding assault on the ADA by federal judges, the media, and other national opinion-makers. A year after the Supreme Court issued a trio of decisions in the summer of 1999 sharply limiting the ADA's reach, another decision invalidated an entire title of the act as it applied to the states. By this time, disability activists and disability rights lawyers were speaking openly of a backlash against the ADA. What happened, why did it happen, and what can we learn from the patterns of public, media, and judicial response to the ADA that emerged in the 1990s? In this book, a distinguished group of disability activists, disability rights lawyers, social scientists and humanities scholars grapple with these questions. Taken together, these essays construct and illustrate a new and powerful theoretical model of sociolegal change and retrenchment that can inform both the conceptual and theoretical work of scholars and the day-to-day practice of social justice activists. Contributors include Lennard J. Davis, Matthew Diller, Harlan Hahn, Linda Hamilton Krieger, Vicki A. Laden, Stephen L. Percy, Marta Russell, and Gregory Schwartz. Backlash Against the ADA will interest disability rights activists, lawyers, law students and legal scholars interested in social justice and social change movements, and students and scholars in disability studies, political science, media studies, American studies, social movement theory, and legal history. Linda Hamilton Krieger is Professor of Law, University of California School of Law, Berkeley.

Federal Disability Law in a Nutshell

Federal Disability Law in a Nutshell
Author: Bonnie P. Tucker
Publisher: West Group Publishing
Total Pages: 570
Release: 1998
Genre: Law
ISBN:

Constitutional Rights; Who is Disabled?; Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Sections 504, 501,503); Employment Discrimination; Architectural Barriers; Access to Programs and Services; ADA Access Board Guidelines; Housing; Postsecondary Education; Transportation; ADA Miscellaneous; Newborns with Disabilities; Individuals with Disabilities Education Act; Section 504 and the ADA: Elementary and Secondary Education; Disciplining Students with Disabilities.