H.R.3027 - Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act of 2011

To end the use of corporal punishment in schools, and for other purposes. view all titles (2)

All Bill Titles

  • Short: Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act of 2011 as introduced.
  • Official: To end the use of corporal punishment in schools, and for other purposes. as introduced.

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Bill's Views

  • Today: 7
  • Past Seven Days: 28
  • All-Time: 1,309
 
Introduced
 
House
Passes
 
Senate
Passes
 
President
Signs
 

 
09/21/11
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Official Summary

9/22/2011--Introduced.Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act of 2011 - Amends the General Education Provisions Act to prohibit the Secretary of Education from providing education funding to any educational agency or institution that allows school personnel to inflict corporal punishment

Official Summary

9/22/2011--Introduced.Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act of 2011 - Amends the General Education Provisions Act to prohibit the Secretary of Education from providing education funding to any educational agency or institution that allows school personnel to inflict corporal punishment upon a student as a form of punishment or to modify undesirable behavior. Requires each state to submit a plan to the Secretary, within 18 months of this Act's enactment and every third year thereafter, that describes how the state eliminates the use of corporal punishment in schools and makes school personnel and parents aware of its policies and procedures for doing so. Authorizes the Secretary to award three-year grants to states and, through them, competitive subgrants to local educational agencies (LEAs) to assist them in improving school climate and culture by implementing school-wide positive behavior supports. Requires grant and subgrant funds to be used for professional training, technical assistance, research, and outreach regarding positive behavior supports. Requires LEAs to ensure that private school personnel can participate, on an equitable basis, in activities supported by such funds. Authorizes the Secretary to allocate funds to the Secretary of the Interior to carry out such activities with regard to schools operated or funded by the Department of the Interior. Directs the Secretary to conduct a national assessment to determine compliance with this Act's requirements and identify best practices regarding positive behavior support professional training programs. Gives Protection and Advocacy Systems the authority provided under the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 2000 to investigate, monitor, and enforce this Act's protections for students.

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Recent News Coverage

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03/09/12
Counting On Us: Release of New Civil Rights Data Is the First Step in Helping Our Kids

supporting H.R. 3027, the Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act, which would ban the practice of school personnel striking or beating students in public schools and private schools that serve students who receive federal services; and • urging the ..

Source: favstocks.com
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12/27/11
Stop child abuse in schools pass H.R. 3027!!

Federal Bill H.R. 3027 "The Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act," sponsored by Carolyn McCarthy, is now before congress and it may die soon if it doesn’t receive enough support from Congressmen. This isn’t the first time it has come ...

Source: Salon
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10/02/11
Students Get Real-life Lesson in Proposing Legislation

... for this," says Jeff Kline, teacher at Preble. "I gave them direction. I taught the process of how a bill becomes a law, what is a bill and they were off to the races." A school lesson that started with an idea ends with an unusual grad

Source: WBAY
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Recent Blog Coverage

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05/07/12
WashingtonWatch.com - H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement ...

U.S. Congress: H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement through Transparent Interrogations Act of 2007.

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05/07/12
WashingtonWatch.com - H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement ...

U.S. Congress: H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement through Transparent Interrogations Act of 2007.

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05/07/12
WashingtonWatch.com - H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement ...

U.S. Congress: H.R. 3027, The Effective Law Enforcement through Transparent Interrogations Act of 2007.

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