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Kohlberg Moral Judgment…1
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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Anderson, Bradford P. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2022
This article demonstrates how, and provides all necessary material, to utilize experiential classroom integration of an earthquake insurance policy as an engaging and immersive tool to introduce business law students to applied contract analysis and interpretation. Students also gain an understanding of insurance concepts through this exercise.…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Seismology, Insurance, Law Students
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Heart, Tsipi; Finklestein, Elad; Cohen, Menashe – Quality Assurance in Education: An International Perspective, 2022
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to assess students' perceptions of four teaching and learning (T&L) methods used in a blended learning Contract Law course, namely, frontal, written assignments, simulations and online asynchronous T&L. Design/methodology/approach: Law students (n = 417) filled in an anonymous questionnaire on their…
Descriptors: Law Students, Legal Education (Professions), Contracts, Blended Learning
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Turner, Jason James; Amirnuddin, Puteri Sofia; Singh, Harmahinder Singh Iqbal – Malaysian Journal of Learning and Instruction, 2019
Purpose: The objective of this study was to examine the role of legal learning space in a Malaysian university and how this space impacts on law students' preparation for the employment market. This study comes in response to the issue of inexperienced graduates, who lack appropriate employability skills for the world of work, commonly referred to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Law Students, Employment Potential, Job Skills
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Gibbons, Jenny – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
Reflective practice is an essential component of experiential learning and is embedded within the curriculum at York Law School, where the undergraduate law programme is delivered using a problem-based learning model. Using qualitative data from a survey of the markers of one of the summative reflective tasks, and Bernstein's evaluative rules as a…
Descriptors: Reflection, Experiential Learning, Undergraduate Study, Problem Based Learning
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Higgins, Noelle; Dewhurst, Elaine; Watkins, Los – Research in Education, 2012
While field trips are often employed in primary and even second level education as a pedagogical tool, aimed at exposing students to real life experiences, such activities are not as popular at third level (Falk and Balling, 1982; Muse, Chiarelott and Davidman, 1982; Anderson and Zhang, 2003). However, such experiential learning techniques can be…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Teaching Methods, Field Trips, Law Students
Alfaro, Daisy Denise – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This study focuses on the academic resilience exhibited by urban, low-income, first college generation Latino students, as they navigated numerous risk factors and persisted from early education to law school. In order to uncover the protective factors that allowed resilient Latino students to overcome adversity within the K-20 educational…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Resilience (Psychology), Urban Areas, Low Income Students
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article describes how a New York institution gives its students a hands-on education in courtroom wrangling. Unlike medical students, who work in teaching hospitals and clinics as they learn, most law students don't set foot in a courtroom until their third and final year, when they have the option of participating in legal clinics. The Touro…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Experiential Learning, Law Students, Law Schools
Murray, Paul V. – 1986
The relationship between a two-semester university-based legal clinic experience and the moral judgment of third-year law school student participants was investigated. A nonstandard form of the Kohlberg Moral Judgment Interview (MJI) was administered to 20 students at the beginning of the clinic and to the remaining 14 students near the completion…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Law Students, Legal Education (Professions)
Knerr, Charles R.; Sommerman, Andrew B. – 2000
This paper describes the use of simulated appellate court proceedings as an educational tool in U.S. undergraduate colleges and universities (and schools worldwide). Undergraduate moot court is less common in the United States than is the law school form of appellate simulation. Research shows that moot courts benefit students as they perform…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Internet, Law Students
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Amsterdam, Anthony G. – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
Legal education is seen as too narrow because it fails to develop in students ways of thinking within and about the role of lawyers--methods of critical analysis, planning and decision-making that are conceptual foundations for practical skills. (MLW)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, College Instruction, Critical Thinking, Experiential Learning
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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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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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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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Brest, Paul – Journal of Legal Education, 1982
An experimental program at Stanford University called "Lawyering Process" is described. The goals of the course include: (1) introducing legal planning and basic interpersonal skills; (2) examining the concepts of "professionalism"; (3) placing legal research and writing assignments in the context of law practice; and (4)…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
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Brown, James M. – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
The Land Development Law course at George Washington University is an approach to teach the basic concepts of land management and control through a "game" simulation. Instead of studying the law, students actively participate in a simulated real-life environment where they can practice and develop their legal skills. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Court Litigation, Experiential Learning, Games
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