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| 10 Jan 2015 04:32 PM |
H.R. 15 End Educational Discrimination Act
An Act To reform the Department of Education's universities programme and limit the extent that their power may be abused.
//Introduction I have recently discovered that the Department of Education's director is closing off certain courses to new universities, showing discrimination against those who may be late to creating one. The End Educational Discrimination Act, or EEDA, will stop this unnecessary prejudice and reform basic parts of the universities system.
//Section 1
(1) This bill may be cited as the "End Educational Discrimination Act".
(a) "EEDA" may be used as a shortened alternative.
(2) The "Department of Education" is defined as the "[USA] Department of Education ." group and all of its staff.
//Section 2 I fear that the Secretary of Education may attempt to make favourable courses only available to educational institutions which he likes, so this section serves as an ironclad barrier to end any path to abuse of power - by making the Board of Education relevant again.
(1) The Department of Education may not exclude university courses from use to any university.
(a) Universities may teach any university course as made official by the Department of Education.
(2) The Secretary of Education must consult with members of the Board of Education to create a new university course.
(a) All current courses made official at the time this bill was passed are exempt from this rule.
(3) The Secretary of Education must consult with members of the Board of Education to remove an already official university course.
(4) Members of the Board of Education have one vote towards the formation of a new university course, or the removal of an existing official university course.
(a) Should the Secretary of Education ignore, misinterpret, or misconstrue the results of a vote, legal action may be taken by any individual.
//Section 3 Some universities are very highly acclaimed, and others not so. Many would like to join the more prosperous and successful universities, however the Secretary of Education has made sure that this may not be possible due to the limit on university courses. The following sections end this foolishness:
(1) The Department of Education may not restrict the amount of educational courses taught by a private institution.
(a) This includes a set number limit, percentage limit or other way of barring an educational institution from teaching as many approved courses as they'd like.
(2) The Department of Education may not control the amount of people an educational institution is permitted to allow within its group.
//Conclusion If you want to know what this bill will do in a short sentence: it'll ensure the protection of universities and the mishandling or meddling the Department of Education will be restricted to a minimum. While I stand by my prediction that the universities system will ultimately fail, the EEDA will definitely improve its lifespan and allow a period of prosperity in which students have qualifications which help them get a job.
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