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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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Field, Rachael; Duffy, James; Huggins, Anna – Journal of Learning Design, 2015
Empirical evidence in Australia and overseas has established that in many university disciplines, students begin to experience elevated levels of psychological distress in their first year of study. There is now a considerable body of empirical data that establishes that this is a significant problem for law students. Psychological distress may…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Law Students, Legal Education (Professions), Learning Strategies
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Alonso, Patricia Dominguez – Journal of International Education Research, 2011
The working end of Law Degree is called to develop an important role when we consider that the European Higher Education Area is the student manager of his own learning and is considered essential that the student of law, among other skills, to acquire critical thinking skills, investigation techniques, personal development work and use of legal…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Higher Education, Thinking Skills, Bachelors Degrees
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)
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
Ball, Patricia G.; Nelson, Eleanor R. – Journal of College Placement, 1979
The author suggests that interviewing is a skill that can be learned, and describes a program designed especially for law students that is based on the fundamentals of assertiveness training. (Author/HMV)
Descriptors: Assertiveness, Employment Interviews, Higher Education, Interpersonal Competence
Mangan, Katherine S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2003
Describes how law reviews are debating whether to change the qualification rules and competitions so that more minority students are admitted as members. (EV)
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education, Law Students
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Drechsel, Robert E. – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2001
Describes "The Southworth Project," an effort to bring together a small group of law students and journalism students to generate in-depth coverage of a Supreme Court case involving students, the University and the First Amendment. Examines the Southworth Project in detail and explains how the Project ideas developed. Notes the project's…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journalism Education, Law Students, Program Descriptions
Rachid, Mohamed; Knerr, Charles R. – 2000
This document presents a history of moot court, defined as a mock court where hypothetical cases are tried for the training of law students. The first recorded reference to a moot court was in the year 997, and moots were common at the Inns of Court and Chancery in 14th century England. In 18th century England there were 4 greater Inns of Court…
Descriptors: Educational History, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Bielby, Philip – Teaching in Higher Education, 2003
Suggests practical recommendations for realizing pedagogical objectives in teaching morally contentious issues using insights gained from teaching such issues to second- and third-year undergraduate law students as part of a legal philosophy module. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Law Students, Moral Issues
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Hirsh, Kate Ferguson – Journal of Basic Writing, 1980
Presents writing exercises and approaches for teaching composition skills that law students will need. The focus is on critical analysis of previous law cases and the content as well as organization of compositions. (HTH)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Law Students
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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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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Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1999
Explores what would happen to black law school admissions if affirmative-action admissions decisions are banned. The threat to affirmative action is only half of the problem of integrating African Americans into the major law firms, which are so overwhelmingly white that many blacks prefer not to join them. (SLD)
Descriptors: Admission (School), Affirmative Action, Blacks, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Matlon, Ronald J. – 1981
There is a growing interest in the field of speech communication by legal educators and a mutual interest in the legal process by communication educators. One dimension of this interest is the development of undergraduate courses that focus on communication in the legal process. One such course is offered at the University of Massachusetts,…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Integrated Curriculum
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