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In what's believed to be the first case of its kind, a student argued that Cleveland State University violated his Fourth Amendment rights when he complied with a webcam recording of his exam space.
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A state appeals court this month will wade into a dispute about whether the University of Florida should refund fees to students who were forced to switch to remote learning in 2020 during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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As a third pandemic school year draws to a close, new research offers the clearest accounting yet of the pandemic's academic toll.
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The 1st District Court of Appeal announced it will hear arguments next month in a potential class-action lawsuit against the University of Florida over refunding student fees during the school's remote learning at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Many low-income families who want their children to keep learning remotely are losing access to a federal program that helped them pay for meals.
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As coronavirus cases and pediatric hospitalizations surge in the U.S., the majority of U.S. schools are staying open for in-person learning.
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Florida lawmakers will deal with the pandemic’s impact on education when they reconvene in Tallahassee in March. Among the issues: a steep drop in student attendance, growing concerns about learning losses and a Republican effort to consolidate the state’s school choice programs.
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Most schooling has been offered online this semester. Teachers are working hard to improve that experience, but many students are still left behind.