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Henderson, Bethany Rubin – Journal of Legal Education, 2003
Explores the purpose of law school and its impact on students' perceptions of professional norms. Reviews reasons for student dissatisfaction with law school and examines the current pedagogical and curricular practices. Offers suggestions to improve the relevance of legal education to the real world lawyers will encounter. (SLD)
Descriptors: Curriculum, Law Schools, Law Students, Legal Education (Professions)
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Rickson, Roy E. – Journal of Legal Education, 1973
Discusses when law students legitimize the expectations of their professors rather than those of their peers. (Author)
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Faculty, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Neumann, Richard K., Jr. – Journal of Legal Education, 2000
Used statistics from publicly available sources to establish how women are treated in legal education. Found that women will soon be the majority of students; although they have higher undergraduate grades than men, that differential reverses in the first year of law school. Also, women faculty are paid less than comparable male colleagues and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Females, Law Schools, Law Students
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Siegfried, John J. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
Noting the increasing role of economics in the law, many law schools have introduced formal economics instruction into their curricula. Several of the controversies surrounding liberal arts courses taught in law schools are examined. Prior formal coursework in the subject appeared to have no relationship to course performance. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Courses, Data Analysis, Economics
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Amandes, Richard B. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
At the end of each academic year in most law schools, the faculty face the task of deciding what to do with that year's academically disqualified students. Experiences at Texas Tech University are used to illustrate a philosophy and approach in handling disqualification situations. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Admission, Disqualification, Eligibility, Higher Education
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Shepherd, George B. – Journal of Legal Education, 2003
Focuses on a major barrier to the full entry of blacks into the legal profession: the elaborate system of the American Bar Association (ABA) for accreditation of law schools. Discusses the academic racism and financial racism of the ABA accreditation system. (SLD)
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Black Students, Equal Education, Law Schools
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Baier, Paul R. – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
It is proposed that a few "destinct and lively pictures" be included in teaching materials in order to stimulate study of constitutional law instruction. A picture is seen as a door to ideas. (MLW)
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, College Instruction, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Elkins, James R. – Journal of Legal Education, 1985
Excerpts from law students' journals illustrate themes of their early experiences with law school, including idealism, high expectations, exhilaration, frustration, stress, conflict, boredom, alienation, and despair. (MSE)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Autobiographies, Diaries, Higher Education
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Ortwein, Bernard M. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
The purpose in teaching a negotiation course is to stimulate law students' awareness of both their own capabilities and limitations as negotiators. It is anticipated that students will develop an understanding of how to recognize, control, and cope with the demands of personality interactions. (MLW)
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Ethics
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Ottley, Bruce L. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
Developments in legal education in Papua New Guinea are examined and the efforts to meet the challenge of the International Legal Center to produce "new kinds of law-trained people" are analyzed. In recent years a conscious effort has been made to produce an entirely new approach to legal education. (MLW)
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Faculty, Developing Nations, Higher Education
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Redlich, Norman – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
As law schools shed their pervasive elitism, clinical training will grow in scope and importance. Lawyers who meet the demands of a broad-based clientele cannot function with the limited skills that traditional education has provided. Law schools will have to train people to operate independently. (MLW)
Descriptors: Business, Educational Change, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
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Moran, Gerald P. – Journal of Legal Education, 1978
In this statement prepared for an orientation program for incoming law students, focus is on the general objectives of legal training and on student expectations. (LBH)
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Expectation, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Zarr, Melvyn – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
A way is described to expose first-year law students to a whole case and thus to blend in appellate decisions, statutes, and scholarly articles as they might be discovered and used by the parties and the court. (MLW)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Criminal Law, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
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Robert, E. R.; Winter, M. F. – Journal of Legal Education, 1978
Addressed are the questions of what factors other than intellectual ability influence achievement in law school, and whether these influences are felt differently by women and men. The study results indicate that, generally, women who see themselves as being "masculine" are more successful in law school. (JMD)
Descriptors: Females, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Vernon, David H. – Journal of Legal Education, 1989
The paper reviews and critiques the 13 existing (1987) law school assistance programs and proposes a national repayment-assistance debt-forgiveness program which would involve an income-contingent repayment "tax" coupled with an assurance to creditors of repayment by means of a "guarantee" or "insurance" fund. (DB)
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Government Role, Higher Education, Income
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