What constitutional protections apply in teacher dismissal cases?

a. Teachers have liberty and property rights under the U.S. Constitution.
b. Teachers have notice and warning rights under the U.S. Constitution.
c. Teachers have Fourth Amendment rights in a dismissal case.
d. Teachers have Ninth Amendment rights in a dismissal case.
e. Teachers have due process rights under the Eighth Amendment in dismissal cases.


A

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A teacher shares with her peer that her kindergarten students love to hear Mama Do You Love Me? by Barbara M. Joose repeatedly throughout the week. Students request the book during read-aloud time and any free time. The kindergarten teacher is worried that she should be reading different books to her students instead of the same one over and over. How should her peer respond:

a. "Hide the book. Students will forget about it." b. "Read it to your students over and over. You can help students develop skills with each reading." c. "Ask the librarian what he thinks." d. "Read it once more then put it away. We have too many other things to do."

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In order to engage fathers more actively in their child's program, staff might:

a. make a point of watching the Sunday game to talk to dads. b. make the environment more welcoming with posters of dads and babies, etc. c. keep the sports pages near the sign-in sheet. d. always give the monthly tuition statement to the dad.

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According to the text, which of the following is not a consequence of childhood obesity?

A. shorter lifespan on average than today's adults. B. type 2 diabetes C. loneliness D. likely to lead to prescription drug abuse

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Mr. Burris teaches a class made up predominately of African American and Latino/a students. The students are engaging in a debate about a controversial topic. Mr. Burris notices that some students are getting louder, more animated, and more overtly emotional as they build their argument. Mr. Burris asks that all students calm down and remember that the goal is to have a meaningful, productive

conversation, and that if the behavior continues, they'll have to discontinue the debate. Mr. Burris's intervention is a. likely to be effective, because it is a reasonably and professionally delivered request. b. likely to be effective, because it reminds students that Mr. Burris likes a calm and orderly classroom. c. likely to be ineffective, as the students' behavior may be a product of cultural norms and they may not perceive it as inappropriate . d. likely to be ineffective, as Mr. Burris has demonstrated authoritarian behaviors to which students are likely to respond with strong negative feelings.

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