What are you expectations about the session today

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What are you expectations about the session today

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Jo McKenzie, Senior Lecturer, Institute of Interactive Media and Learning, UTS ... damages are assessed on a tortious basis ie what was your loss ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What are you expectations about the session today


1
What are you expectations about the session today?
2
Educational Malpractice
  • Taught or Tort?

3
Session Speakers
  • Lyndal Taylor, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law,
    UTS
  • Jo McKenzie, Senior Lecturer, Institute of
    Interactive Media and Learning, UTS
  • Carman Parsons, Equity and Diversity Unit, UTS

4
Defining the Issue
  • Who are affected?
  • How are they affected?
  • What loss might they incur?
  • What claims may they have?

5
Who are Affected?
  • University level
  • Dealing with independent adults
  • May be full-fee paying or HECS/PELLS students
  • Large classes
  • Limited likelihood at coursework level to be
    known personally in contrast to thesis supervision
  • School level
  • Teachers have greater control over students
  • Smaller class sizes - more individual knowledge
  • Liability could differ for private schools in
    contrast to public schools

6
How are they affected?
  • Coming in
  • Marketing/ Faculty Handbooks may affect their
    expectations
  • Answers to specific queries/ Career days may
    affect their decision to enrol at the University
    or in certain units
  • Whilst at University
  • The ability to achieve satisfactory outcomes
    could be affected by
  • resources
  • quality of course outlines
  • teaching quality
  • Administrative support

7
What loss?
  • Could be broad range
  • Fail the course
  • Fail to meet professional accreditation
  • Incur actual harm - psychological or physical
  • Show a causative link with failing to gain
    relevant employment or promotion

8
What claims might they have?
  • Contract
  • This is dependent on their being a contract
    between the parties and ascertaining the terms of
    that contract
  • Query if there is consideration if HECS student?
  • Query the terms of the contract - does it include
    statements in the Handbook?
  • The remedy will be a contractual one such as
    terminating the contract and being refunded the
    cost of the course and/or contractual damages
    which is to be the party in the position they
    would have been if the contract had been
    performed.
  • Turns on which term/ representation was not
    fulfilled.

9
Negligence
  • To establish negligence the person needs to show
    that
  • there was a duty of care
  • that has been breached
  • which caused damage to be suffered
  • and that the damage was forseeable
  • damages are assessed on a tortious basis ie what
    was your loss

10
Problems with establishing negligence
  • Duty of Care
  • The Australian Courts have traditionally been
    reluctant to impose a duty of care on teachers to
    teach to an appropriate standard on public policy
    grounds.
  • This does not discount the duty of care to
    supervise in the playground to avoid personal
    injury
  • Rather, it relates to educational decisions taken
    about a student
  • For instance, do they need extra support o
    develop motor skills/ reading/ ADHD
  • In the US courts failure to diagnose such needs
    was successful as medical negligence

11
It must be established ...
  • Which caused the damage claimed, which was
    reasonably forseeable
  • in this context, primarily the loss will be
    economic
  • to claim economic loss not consequent on physical
    injury, requires knowledge of possibly direct
    impact
  • Contrast a PhD student with a student in a class
    of 200
  • That the duty of care has been breached
  • this requires some careless of reckless behaviour
  • there must be evidence of negligence

12
Phelps v Hillingdon BC
  • The House of Lords handed down the decision in
    Phelps in July 2000.
  • It was four cases heard together. Three related
    to students who had been sent to the educational
    psychologist for assessment. They had been failed
    to be diagnosed as dyslexic and hence not
    received the additional assistance needed.
  • The issue was could a public school be held
    responsible for potential loss income due to not
    having an appropriate education.

13
There is a duty of care
  • The House of Lords had no difficulty with finding
    that there was a duty of care from the education
    provider to the student which had been breached.
  • Public policy/ flood gate arguments did not
    protect the school
  • The student was awarded over 45, 650 pounds as
    damages.
  • BUT key issues need to noted
  • These were specific cases, not an argument of a
    class not being appropriately treated
  • the breach resulted from a failure to diagnose,
    which resulted in the failure to teach

14
Failure to offer the ability to succeed
  • One of the matters heard with Phelps turned on a
    different breach of duty of care
  • In Re G the student had muscular dystrophy
  • The student claimed that he could not be
    successful at school as the school had not
    provided appropriate facilities ie computers
  • So the breach of duty of care arose from not
    providing a proper education by not providing him
    with computer technology and training

15
What is the impact of this decision in Australia?
  • House of Lords is highly persuasive in the
    development of our common law
  • More recent statement on negligence by our High
    Court in Perre v Apand (1999) take the approach
    of looking at the salient features to determine
    whether a duty of care exists by looking at past
    cases in similar categories
  • Such an approach should lead to a consideration
    of the Phelps decision

16
It will turn on Public Policy argument
  • New Zealand
  • In Grant, Woolley, Staines and Grant v Victoria
    University of Wellington the High Court held that
    Master of Arts (Applied) in Environmental Studies
    students had an action in contract and tort for a
    claim that the course was not of a reasonable
    Masters standard The students claimed economic
    loss for loss of employment opportunities and Uni
    fees.
  • UK
  • House of Lords was clear that there was not
    justification for blanket immunity in favour of
    teachers or educational psychologists

17
Civil Law jurisdictions
  • USA
  • Generally, the US Courts that schools function in
    imperfect ways and that public policy should
    dictate that no duty of care exists except where
    there has been misclassification and improper
    placement in the school system

18
What will not be caught within the Duty of Care?
  • Policy decisions
  • HOL (other than Lord Nicholls) doubted whether it
    went so far as to cover the quality of classroom
    teaching
  • as it is a claim for economic loss there
    particular plaintiff must have been directly
    forseeably harmed through the breach

19
Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth)
  • S51 A Unconscionability
  • This is an action that arises under common law
    and the TPA
  • Cannot in unconsionable conduct
  • For instance, representing one fee policy and
    then refusing to refund by Australian Early
    Childhood College was found to be unconsionable
  • S52 Misleading or Deceptive Conduct
  • A corporation
  • shall not in trade or commerce
  • engage in misleading or deceptive conduct
  • or conduct likely to mislead or deceive

20
What is in Trade or Commerce?
  • Concrete Constructions v Nelson (1992) High Court
    requires it to be the activity with the public,
    external to the organisation
  • ie it does not cover employer/employee
    relationships
  • Clearly, covers marketing of courses to the
    public
  • might not cover actual classes
  • BUT query if this differs if the students are
    full fee paying
  • Does it differ for Short courses?

21
What is Misleading or Deceptive Conduct?
  • Nike (1990) High Court the test is the whether
    the conduct would lead into error a reasonable
    member of the class the conduct is likely to be
    aimed at.
  • How would an intending student read our marketing
    material.
  • Target (2001) Federal Court extends the liable
    conduct to first impressions that are given and
    not corrected.
  • Conduct can include opinions, silences and
    representations

22
Due Care and Skill in providing the service
  • There is also an obligation imposed on
    corporations in s74 that the corporation will
    provide a service with due care and skill
  • This requires that the service be provided in
    the course of a business
  • Does this mean courses provided by Insearch are
    covered, but HECS students are not?
  • If the class material is not prepared with due
    competence, has there been a failure to provide
    the service with due care and skill?

23
In Australia
  • 1994 an action was brought against Deakin
    University for misleading advertising
  • It was alleged the course material was obsolete
    and that pg students were undertaking exactly the
    same course as ug students (notes and assessment)
  • The matter was settled out of Court
  • PhD students have threatened negligent
    supervision when their thesis has been rejected.

24
Future Trends?
  • The breadth of s52 has expanded over the past
    years. The question is - how much of the
    University activity is within trade or commerce
  • However, as long as it is provided in the course
    of business, there is an obligation to provide
    services with due care and skill
  • It is likely that the Australian Courts will now
    accept an action lies in negligence against
    educational institutions
  • With more full fee-paying students claims in
    contract are more likely
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