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Education Rights in the COVID-19 Era 2020

Product ID: CA3071R7
Presented By: State Bar of Wisconsin PINNACLE

Reopening, not as easy as 1, 2, 3

As the coronavirus pandemic continues without an immediate end in sight, it’s likely that the 2020-21 school year will involve more distance learning. While this educational model may help hinder the spread of the virus, it runs the risk of exacerbating existing disparities in the state’s education system.

Wisconsin’s black-white achievement gap is the worst in the U.S.1 Many low income and rural students lack access to computers and/or fast, reliable internet.2 Students with disabilities may not be able to get the adequate support they need through digital platforms.3 Education Rights in the COVID-19 Era will cover the plethora of issues that public schools are facing as they determine how to deliver equitable, effective, and safe instruction this fall.

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OnDemand seminar

Pricing

Member $109.00

Non-Member $159.00

Credits

1.5 CLE

Date and Time

Saturday, October 10, 202012:00 PM - 1:30 PM CT

Add to Calendar 10/10/2020 12:00:00 PM 10/10/2020 1:30:00 PM America/Chicago Education Rights in the COVID-19 Era 2020

Reopening, not as easy as 1, 2, 3

As the coronavirus pandemic continues without an immediate end in sight, it’s likely that the 2020-21 school year will involve more distance learning. While this educational model may help hinder the spread of the virus, it runs the risk of exacerbating existing disparities in the state’s education system.

Wisconsin’s black-white achievement gap is the worst in the U.S.1 Many low income and rural students lack access to computers and/or fast, reliable internet.2 Students with disabilities may not be able to get the adequate support they need through digital platforms.3 Education Rights in the COVID-19 Era will cover the plethora of issues that public schools are facing as they determine how to deliver equitable, effective, and safe instruction this fall.

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Reopening, not as easy as 1, 2, 3

As the coronavirus pandemic continues without an immediate end in sight, it’s likely that the 2020-21 school year will involve more distance learning. While this educational model may help hinder the spread of the virus, it runs the risk of exacerbating existing disparities in the state’s education system.

Wisconsin’s black-white achievement gap is the worst in the U.S.1 Many low income and rural students lack access to computers and/or fast, reliable internet.2 Students with disabilities may not be able to get the adequate support they need through digital platforms.3 Education Rights in the COVID-19 Era will cover the plethora of issues that public schools are facing as they determine how to deliver equitable, effective, and safe instruction this fall.

Read More ↓

Jeffrey Spitzer-Resnick is currently the principal and owner of Systems Change Consulting. For 35 years, he has engaged in effective systems change advocacy, initially on behalf of the elderly, and for the past 25 years, on behalf of children with disabilities, including in the area of special education and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. He has advocated in virtually every forum and method possible, including individual and class action litigation, state and federal lobbying, grassroots organizing, consumer and professional training, and producing publications. He graduated cum laude from Boston College Law School in 1985.

Mckenna Kohlenberg is a J.D./M.S.-Educational Leadership & Policy Analysis candidate at UW. She is committed to innovative, problem-oriented advocacy that reforms and advances civil rights in the public education and criminal systems. As administrator of the SPD's Student Expulsion Prevention Project (StEPP) and an extern for the SPD's Juvenile Unit, she has advocated for fairer school disciplinary practices, championed more equitable, effective instruction for all children, and defended children in delinquency cases. She has also represented indigent criminal defendants and prisoners as a Frank J. Remington Center clinical student. Following her May 2021 graduation, she plans to pursue a career in civil rights law, focusing in special education, disability rights, and criminal reform.

  • Review state and federal guidelines for school reopenings in 2020-21
  • Explore the array of issues complicating a return to in-person instruction
  • Understand why distance learning isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution
  • Review the legal rights of students with disabilities in regard to educational access
  • Discuss implications of the Sixth Circuit’s “right to read” ruling
  • Advocate for students facing educational barriers amidst changing learning environments
  • School lawyers
  • Civil rights lawyers
  • Government lawyers
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