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Sweet, Julie Anne – History Teacher, 2021
The fifth of March 2020 was the 250th anniversary of an event commonly known as the "Boston Massacre," and to commemorate it, the author's upper-level history class staged an unscripted presentation of the resulting historical trial in conjunction with third-year law students enrolled in Practice Court through the Baylor Law School.…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Capstone Experiences, Violence
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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
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Pretorius, Jannie – Teaching Artist Journal, 2018
In this essay, the author explores what educationalists can learn from studying "The Paper Chase." The rise and decline of the Socratic method and the importance of the hidden curriculum are highlighted.
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Films
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Kohonen, Susanna; Kosonen, Jonna; Kettunen, Sinikka – Language Learning in Higher Education, 2021
This report will discuss the process of evaluation for development in a collaborative project that integrated teaching between the Language Centre and the Law School at the University of Eastern Finland. The focus of this report will be on a model the authors devised for the purposes of developing teaching, called "E.A.S.Y,"…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Higher Education
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Curro, Gina; Ainswroth, Nussen – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2018
Recently embraced by the legal profession to make justice more accessible, social media (SM) is fast becoming the primary tool of communication for the courts. In Australia today the Supreme Court of Victoria uses SM to share judgments, media releases, publications, speeches and other information. On the County Court of Victoria home page, one can…
Descriptors: Social Media, Legal Education (Professions), Foreign Countries, Law Schools
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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
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Magee, Rhonda V. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2013
In this chapter, the author uses the phrase "contemplative practices" to encompass an array of personal and pedagogical methods that combine training in awareness and first-person epistemological approaches to knowing and being in the world. These practices include mindfulness meditation (Magee 2011). The gradual inclusion of mindfulness…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Metacognition, Attention, Lawyers
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Joubert, Deidre – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2013
This paper addresses the insufficient traditional method of assessment of tests and examination, which is purely the regurgitation of information. Unfortunately some lecturers tend to cling to the traditional method of assessment as it is an easy route for them to follow. The said method does not encourage the students to become critical thinkers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation, Critical Thinking, Legal Education (Professions)
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Dernbach, John C. – Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 2011
This article is an overview of sustainability efforts in US law schools. It describes two sets of drivers for these efforts--inside and outside the legal profession. Drivers from within the legal profession include the American Bar Association as well as several state and local bar associations; law firms and other law organisations; and current…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Law Schools, Outreach Programs
Branch-Brioso, Karen – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2009
They are not the topics found in a conventional law review: An Austin-based journal delved into the reproductive rights of Hispanic women entering into commercial surrogacy contracts. The next issue of a University of California, Berkeley-based journal will probe the Voting Rights Act--and how it affects Puerto Ricans. A Harvard-based review once…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Periodicals, Law Schools, Law Students
Gray, Katti – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2011
Howard University School of Law had a problem, and school officials knew it. Over a 20-year period, 40 percent of its graduates who took the Maryland bar exam failed it on their first try. During the next 24 months--the time frame required to determine its "eventual pass rate"--almost 90 percent of the students did pass. What they did…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Schools, Tuition Grants, Accreditation (Institutions)
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Rounds, Charles E., Jr. – Academic Questions, 2011
While many law students and recent grads have come to feel that legal education is an expensive waste of time now that the job market for lawyers has collapsed, some seasoned law practitioners have their own concerns about the worth of a legal education. Their concerns, however, relate to product quality rather than product marketability.…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Law Schools, Lawyers
Schmidt, Peter – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Going to law school to get a law degree has become a little like going to an ice-cream parlor for a scoop of vanilla. Plenty of people still do it, but many schools' brochures--like the elaborate flavor-and-topping menus on ice-cream parlor walls--now tempt them with something different, something more. Law students can have their "juris…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Law Schools, Curriculum Implementation
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
The University of San Francisco School of Law is one of at least a dozen law schools in the United States where students represent small investors facing big headaches, often because their brokers were more interested in maximizing their own commissions than in giving sound advice. Supervised by law professors, teams of students file motions,…
Descriptors: Law Students, Law Schools, Money Management, Court Litigation
Lum, Lydia – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2011
Recent law school graduates face the tightest job market in years. Amid lingering industrywide uncertainties, officials at some law schools are scrambling to ensure that underrepresented minorities get jobs, especially law schools not customarily tapped by the country's largest law firms. In some of the more striking measures, a dean will troop…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Labor Market, College Graduates, Statistical Data
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