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Jason M. Scott; Joshua L. Jackson; Andrea M. Pals – AERA Open, 2024
Law schools are held accountable on many fronts to achieve and maintain high bar passage rates. While the course of legal education itself, along with various interventions, is a key driver of bar exam performance, Bahadur et al. (2021) suggests that obscure institutional practices might be inflating institutional bar passage performance. Such…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Law Students, Test Results, Transfer Students
Taylor K. Odle; Ji Yeon Bae; Manuel S. González Canché – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2023
The Uniform Bar Examination (UBE) is a multijurisdictional test that law students can use to gain admission to the bar in 37 states and territories. Despite this near-universal applicability and the potential of UBE to affect law schools' admissions, diversity, affordability, and employment outcomes, no research to date has examined the impacts of…
Descriptors: Licensing Examinations (Professions), Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Law Schools
Reuven Chaim Klein – Online Submission, 2024
This qualitative study explores the potential ways that a traditional Yeshiva education (TYE) helps prepare students for entering and succeeding in law school. The researcher interviewed five rabbi-law professors for their take on this phenomenon and compared the results of those findings with the scholarly literature on the topic to date. Much of…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Law Students, Critical Thinking, Questioning Techniques
Demchenko, Dina; Shynkarov, Oleg; Zaichenko, Liliia – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2021
The article is devoted to the problem of formation of professional foreign language competence of future lawyers in non- linguistic surrounding at the Yaroslavl Mudriy National Law University. With this aim pedagogical experiment was held, which included three stages: axiological, formational, monitoring. Research of the formed professional…
Descriptors: Law Students, Language Proficiency, Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries
Fernandez, Frank; Ro, Hyun Kyoung; Wilson, Miranda – American Journal of Education, 2022
Purpose: Law schools are gatekeepers to powerful positions, including US federal judicial systems and legislative branches. Although scholars have addressed underrepresentation of women and racial minorities in law schools and the legal profession, they tend to examine gender and race separately. This study is a critical quantitative analysis of…
Descriptors: Law Schools, College Admission, Gender Differences, Racial Differences
Gasman, Marybeth; Johnson, Marvin; Gonzalez, Sergio; Blake, Daniel – Innovative Higher Education, 2023
In this paper, we examine the relationships between overall institutional faculty diversity and law student diversity at institutions with Top 14 law schools and Association of American Universities (AAU) member institutions with law schools over the past decade. We chose to examine these institutions because they are arguably the most influential…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Schools, Student Diversity, Diversity (Faculty)
Murray, Karina; Tubridy, Kate P.; Littrich, John; Mundy, Trish K. – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2022
In 2017, the School of Law at the University of Wollongong commenced an experimental initiative through the introduction of a Law Student Pledge. It was designed as a symbolic statement to students that from the day they begin their law studies they become a member of the legal professional community. In this way, it invited First Year Students to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students
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
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
Navjeet Sidhu Kundal; Garima Singh – Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 2024
This paper examines the gendered experiences of female students in Indian law schools, highlighting the influence of societal norms and patriarchal expectations on their education and career choices. Despite the growing presence of national universities offering legal education, women continue to face significant challenges rooted in traditional…
Descriptors: Females, Legal Education (Professions), Law Schools, Indians
Carol Edwards; Liz Hardie – Distance Education, 2024
There has been much interest in how to develop a sense of belonging to an academic institution over the last twenty years, given the evidence that this improves student retention, satisfaction and attainment. Fostering a sense of belonging involves both psychological and sociological aspects; students need to feel like they belong and are valued…
Descriptors: Sense of Community, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Assisted Instruction, Interpersonal Relationship
Ellison, Lynn; Jones, Dawn – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2019
This article describes an action research project that was undertaken to address a poor progression rate at the end of the first year of a single honours law degree. An attainment gap due to gender, age and ethnicity was also noted. The students were predominantly assessed by examinations; therefore a change of assessment to coursework and…
Descriptors: Law Students, Student Evaluation, Change, Gender Differences
Stewart, Georgina Tuari – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2022
This article revisits a moment in the recent history of education in Aotearoa New Zealand when te reo Maori as a language of the university came under intense scrutiny. The original incident took place in 1991 in Hamilton, Aotearoa New Zealand, when two students of Waikato Law School wrote answers in te reo Maori to an examination question…
Descriptors: Malayo Polynesian Languages, Language of Instruction, Language Attitudes, Law Students
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
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