Every month, we distribute a “Title IX Recap,” providing a highlight of the previous month’s litigation, advocacy, and other Title IX-related matters. As always, more information on any lawsuits by accused students or Title IX OCR resolutions will be found in our Accused Students Database and OCR Resolutions Database respectively.

New Regulations Ensure Transcript Access for Students and Transform Disciplinary Investigations

ED “recently released new regulations that are in part aimed at preventing colleges and universities from withholding transcripts from students who owe them money.” These regulations “may also benefit student respondents who are involved in disciplinary investigations.”

House Republicans probe ED communications for “outsized role” of “external organizations” in regulatory changes

“In a letter to U.S. Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, the lawmakers request documents and communications related to the Department’s interactions with external organizations related to the enforcement, administration, or interpretation of Title IX.”

Accused student lawsuit against Virginia Tech survives dismissal

The complaint cited gender bias by DaShawn Dilworth, the hearing panel chair. The Title IX and due process claims survived, but the race discrimination claim did not. The plaintiff was represented by Benjamin North and Lindsay McKasson at Binnall Law Group.

Order: UNC Cannot Disclose Accused Student’s Identity, Disciplinary Records

Procedural deficiencies, a disparity of harms, and citations of gender bias by Senior Investigator Jeremy Enlow and Associate Vice Chancellor Elizabeth Hall played a part.

House Democrats press Education Department over Title IX rule delay

Sixty-six lawmakers signed a letter “urging the U.S. Department of Education to finalize its two highly anticipated Title IX regulations as quickly as possible.”

Updated: A look at 12 years of Title IX policy

“As the Biden administration delays — for the second time  — the release of final rules, take a look back at major events impacting the civil rights law.”

Meta-analysis: less hiring discrimination against women than predicted, more in their favor

“Selection bias in favor of male over female candidates was eliminated and, if anything, slightly reversed in sign starting in 2009 for mixed-gender and male-stereotypical jobs in our sample.”

Ex-Providence Academy students sue school claiming they were wrongfully expelled

“The lawsuit claims these boys were then falsely labeled as rapists, were ridiculed, ostracized and this expulsion derailed their educational, athletic and professional futures.” Another news report says the alleged victim “insisted the act was consensual” and that Providence “did not assert that it expelled (the boys) for any reason related to the alleged sex assault.”

All Databases: Mobile and Tablet Experience Overhauled, Improved

“We’ve completed an upgrade to all our databases, improving the experience when viewing them on smaller screens, especially on tablets and mobile devices. Navigation is more efficient, and records are displayed with greater clarity.”

New Research Brief: “Male Suicide: Patterns and Recent Trends”

“The male suicide rate is 4 times higher than the female rate across age ranges, as we show in a new AIBM research brief. There were 40,000 male suicide deaths in 2022, almost as many as from car accidents.”

Thank You for Reading

If you like what you have read, feel free to sign up for our newsletter here:

Support Our Work

If you like our work, consider supporting it via a donation or signing up for a database.

About the Author

Title IX for All is a U.S.-based organization that advocates fairness and equal treatment in education. Our main activities are database development, writing, counseling, publishing, research, public speaking, and networking.

Related Posts

More from Title IX for All

Accused Students Database

Research due process and similar lawsuits by students accused of Title IX violations (sexual assault, harassment, dating violence, stalking, etc.) in higher education.

OCR Resolutions Database

Research resolved Title IX investigations of K-12 and postsecondary institutions by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR).

Attorneys Directory

A basic directory for looking up Title IX attorneys, most of whom have represented parties in litigation by accused students.

Every month, we distribute a “Title IX Recap,” providing a highlight of the previous month’s litigation, advocacy, and other Title IX-related matters. As always, more information on any lawsuits by accused students or Title IX OCR resolutions will be found in our Accused Students Database and OCR Resolutions Database respectively.

New Regulations Ensure Transcript Access for Students and Transform Disciplinary Investigations

ED “recently released new regulations that are in part aimed at preventing colleges and universities from withholding transcripts from students who owe them money.” These regulations “may also benefit student respondents who are involved in disciplinary investigations.”

House Republicans probe ED communications for “outsized role” of “external organizations” in regulatory changes

“In a letter to U.S. Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, the lawmakers request documents and communications related to the Department’s interactions with external organizations related to the enforcement, administration, or interpretation of Title IX.”

Accused student lawsuit against Virginia Tech survives dismissal

The complaint cited gender bias by DaShawn Dilworth, the hearing panel chair. The Title IX and due process claims survived, but the race discrimination claim did not. The plaintiff was represented by Benjamin North and Lindsay McKasson at Binnall Law Group.

Order: UNC Cannot Disclose Accused Student’s Identity, Disciplinary Records

Procedural deficiencies, a disparity of harms, and citations of gender bias by Senior Investigator Jeremy Enlow and Associate Vice Chancellor Elizabeth Hall played a part.

House Democrats press Education Department over Title IX rule delay

Sixty-six lawmakers signed a letter “urging the U.S. Department of Education to finalize its two highly anticipated Title IX regulations as quickly as possible.”

Updated: A look at 12 years of Title IX policy

“As the Biden administration delays — for the second time  — the release of final rules, take a look back at major events impacting the civil rights law.”

Meta-analysis: less hiring discrimination against women than predicted, more in their favor

“Selection bias in favor of male over female candidates was eliminated and, if anything, slightly reversed in sign starting in 2009 for mixed-gender and male-stereotypical jobs in our sample.”

Ex-Providence Academy students sue school claiming they were wrongfully expelled

“The lawsuit claims these boys were then falsely labeled as rapists, were ridiculed, ostracized and this expulsion derailed their educational, athletic and professional futures.” Another news report says the alleged victim “insisted the act was consensual” and that Providence “did not assert that it expelled (the boys) for any reason related to the alleged sex assault.”

All Databases: Mobile and Tablet Experience Overhauled, Improved

“We’ve completed an upgrade to all our databases, improving the experience when viewing them on smaller screens, especially on tablets and mobile devices. Navigation is more efficient, and records are displayed with greater clarity.”

New Research Brief: “Male Suicide: Patterns and Recent Trends”

“The male suicide rate is 4 times higher than the female rate across age ranges, as we show in a new AIBM research brief. There were 40,000 male suicide deaths in 2022, almost as many as from car accidents.”

Thank You for Reading

If you like what you have read, feel free to sign up for our newsletter here:

Support Our Work

If you like our work, consider supporting it via a donation or signing up for a database.

About the Author

Title IX for All is a U.S.-based organization that advocates fairness and equal treatment in education. Our main activities are database development, writing, counseling, publishing, research, public speaking, and networking.

Related Posts

More from Title IX for All

Accused Students Database

Research due process and similar lawsuits by students accused of Title IX violations (sexual assault, harassment, dating violence, stalking, etc.) in higher education.

OCR Resolutions Database

Research resolved Title IX investigations of K-12 and postsecondary institutions by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR).

Attorneys Directory

A basic directory for looking up Title IX attorneys, most of whom have represented parties in litigation by accused students.