This document outlines the syllabus for an Employment Law course. It provides information about course resources, responsibilities, assignments, grading, and other logistics. Students are expected to complete readings, assignments, exams, a case brief, paper, and group project. The professor's contact information and office hours are listed. Key topics to be covered include agency law, vicarious liability, and analyzing employment law cases. Students will discuss examples of liability for employees' acts and debate related issues in small groups.
This document outlines the syllabus for an Employment Law course. It provides information about course resources, responsibilities, assignments, grading, and other logistics. Students are expected to complete readings, assignments, exams, a case brief, paper, and group project. The professor's contact information and office hours are listed. Key topics to be covered include agency law, vicarious liability, and analyzing employment law cases. Students will discuss examples of liability for employees' acts and debate related issues in small groups.
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Employment Law Class: PowerPoint Presentation
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This document outlines the syllabus for an Employment Law course. It provides information about course resources, responsibilities, assignments, grading, and other logistics. Students are expected to complete readings, assignments, exams, a case brief, paper, and group project. The professor's contact information and office hours are listed. Key topics to be covered include agency law, vicarious liability, and analyzing employment law cases. Students will discuss examples of liability for employees' acts and debate related issues in small groups.
This document outlines the syllabus for an Employment Law course. It provides information about course resources, responsibilities, assignments, grading, and other logistics. Students are expected to complete readings, assignments, exams, a case brief, paper, and group project. The professor's contact information and office hours are listed. Key topics to be covered include agency law, vicarious liability, and analyzing employment law cases. Students will discuss examples of liability for employees' acts and debate related issues in small groups.
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Employment Law
LA355 Spring 2014
Professor Judy Kalisker Office: 515B, M 9:30-10:30, Th 2:15-3:15 617-733-2442, [email protected]
1 Course Resources Text specially prepared combining two texts Additional Readings posted on SMGTools or link in syllabus Me office hours on title slide or call to make appointment I am at school at some point every M-Th) Each other 2 Poll Everywhere www.polleverywhere.com/register? p=1u07h-4ikr&pg=OB0oMA
To respond to a poll: 1. Text the answer to 37607 or 2. Log in to pollev.com/kalisker 3 Your Responsibilities Be prepared for class. Readings due on the day noted on Syllabus Read! Assignments Quizzes occasionally in class Group project towards end of semester Ask questions Be engaged in class Be prepared for tests
4 Your Assignments Brief written assignments as posted/emailed Quizzes via Poll Everywhere 2 exams (including final) Multiple choice and short answer Closed Book Final exam is cumulative Case Brief due February 6 (A-K) or February 20 (L-Z) Paper (to be assigned) due April 6 Group Project presentations (April 22, 29) Course Participation In class In office hours 5 Ground Rules Be on time. Show up and be engaged. Use technology for class purposes only (taking notes, quizzes) Or lose points. Or lose right to use technology. If you have to leave the room during class please keep it brief Dont cheat. That includes plagiarism. Cite if you use a source! No collaboration with other students, friends, family, or other professors, on any written assignments or tests unless I say so. Dont lie. If you cant fulfill one of your responsibilities, be honest and make an alternative plan. Have fun!
6 Things to Notice When Reading a Case Citation What court? What year? Civil or Criminal? Who are the parties? (lawyers are not parties) Issue? What question is the judge trying to answer? Often starts with whether. Outcome? How did the judge answer that question? Reasoning? Why did the judge answer the question that way? Issues of fact versus issues of law. Judges can only decide issues of law. What employer policies are at issue?
7 Grading Class participation, quizzes, attendance: 20% Exams: 40% Midterm 20% Final 20% One case brief: 10% Individual Paper: 15% Group Project: 15%
8 Questions on Logistics? 9 What is Employment Law? Divide into groups of 3-4 people Discuss the following: 1. Who in an organization needs to be aware of employment law issues? 2. What jobs have you held? 3. What employment laws have you encountered in jobs you have held (your own rights as an employee or requirements your employer had to follow)?
10 Agency Law Legal principle where one person becomes responsible for the act(s) of another person In employment law, this comes into play when an individual tries to make the company liable for the wrongful act(s) of an employee of the company. This could be: Vicarious liability the general concept of holding a person (individual, corporation, organization) liable for something that another person did in most situations a plaintiff has to prove if the defendant is not directly liable that the person who did the unlawful conduct had the actual (bestowed by the defendant) or apparent (plaintiff reasonably believed) authority to engage in the conduct/authorize the transaction, etc. In some cases due to the nature of the agency relationship the law will say that the defendant is strictly (i.e. automatically) liable for the conduct of the person who engaged in the conduct (e.g., harassment by a supervisor) 11 Liability for Employees Acts Vicarious liability examples If a plaintiff can show all of the elements of a sexual harassment claim (sexual conduct in the workplace that is pervasive and creates an uncomfortable work environment), the employer will only be liable if the employer knew or should have known about the conduct and failed to take prompt, effective action to address it. In Massachusetts (and several other states), if the elements of sexual harassment are proven and the conduct was committed by an individual to whom the employer had assigned the responsibility to supervise at least one employee (which does not have to be the plaintiff), then the employer will be strictly liable for the harassment. In other words, the employer cannot avoid vicarious liability for unlawful, harassing conduct of a supervisor even if the employer took action to address the conduct once informed of it. In contrast, under federal law, an employer can avoid vicarious liability for the unlawful, harassing conduct of a supervisor if it can prove that it did certain things, such as teach supervisors that this conduct is inappropriate, investigate every allegation of harassment internally and take prompt, responsive action. 12 Divide into 3 groups Group 1 Cooley case You are HR for the company and your company just paid money to settle this case. What policies do you want to implement to try and avoid liability for this type of thing in the future? Group 2 Walgreens Video How strong do you think the employees case is against Walgreens for wrongful termination and why? Group 3 Rendon Kidney donation Should companies have to give employees as much time off as they need for medical issues? Is this a legal issue or an ethical issue or both?