Friday, September 23, 2011
Court unanimously oks peer grading. (Legal Brief).
Court unanimously oks peer grading. (Legal Brief). The U.S. Supreme Court decided that teachers could continue theage-old age-oldadj.Very old or of long standing.age-oldAdjectivevery old; ancientAdj. 1. practice of asking students to swap papers and grade oneanother's work. The justices unanimously voted in favor of upon the side of; favorable to; for the advantage of.See also: favor peergrading, providing it is under a teacher's direction. The casebegan with the challenge of a Tulsa woman, and mother of four, whoclaimed that her school district violated vi��o��late?tr.v. vi��o��lat��ed, vi��o��lat��ing, vi��o��lates1. To break or disregard (a law or promise, for example).2. To assault (a person) sexually.3. her children's privacy byallowing other students to see their schoolwork. The justices said peergrading does not pose a threat to student privacy. (For GaryStager's opinion on the case, see, "The New Three-fifthsCompromise The three-fifths compromise was a compromise between Southern and Northern states reached during the Philadelphia Convention of 1787 in which three-fifths of the population of slaves would be counted for enumeration purposes regarding both the distribution of taxes and the ," Speaking Out, DISTRICT ADMINISTRATION, February 2002,p. 21.)
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