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Gonzales, Kathy – Creighton Journal of Interdisciplinary Leadership, 2019
This essay is focused on the role which law schools might play in "reinventing" the law student for a more robust role in an increasingly complex global economy. The case is presented for law schools to embrace and promote a collaborative orientation toward legal conflict and the role which lawyers have to play as problem solvers.…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Law Students, Global Approach, Cooperation
Szypszak, Charles – Journal of Political Science Education, 2015
Socratic method is associated with law school teaching by which students are asked questions in class that require them to analyze cases and derive legal principles. Despite the method's potential benefits, students usually do not view it as supportive and enriching but rather as a kind of survival ritual. As a pedagogical approach for use in any…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Teaching Methods, Legal Education (Professions), Undergraduate Study
Rothstein, Jesse; Yoon, Albert H. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
The Supreme Court has held repeatedly that race-based preferences in public university admissions are constitutional. But debates over the wisdom of affirmative action continue. Opponents of these policies argue that preferences are detrimental to minority students--that by placing these students in environments that are too competitive,…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Law Schools, College Admission, Minority Groups
Matambanadzo, Saru – Policy Futures in Education, 2006
This article argues that the culture and practice of legal education in the United States functions to dehumanize law students and potentially produce one-dimensional lawyers in the service of corporate interests and the capitalist status quo. These lawyers are trained to serve not only as the guardians of legal rights, social entitlements and…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Justice, Lawyers