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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
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
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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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Michelman, Frank I. – Journal of Legal Education, 1982
The law school curriculum is excessively committed to doctrinal learning as differentiated from (1) theoretical and (2) practical learning. Law schools have an educational responsibility to offer their students a modicum of instruction in the applied skills of legal representation. (MLW)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Innovation, Educational Policy, Experiential Learning
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Snyman, P. C. A. – Journal of Legal Education, 1979
Because law schools need facilities to provide their students with clinical experience and the Legal Services Corporation has the resources and facilities but needs the manpower to serve the legal needs of the poor, it is argued that third year law students should intern with the Corporation. (JMD)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Educational Resources, Experiential Learning, Graduate Students
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Doyel, Robert L. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
A new course of clinical education at the University of Mississippi is described. A member of the teaching faculty was appointed under the Criminal Justice Act to represent indigent defendants with the assistance of student interns. Goals for the future and possible implementation at other law schools are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Descriptions, Criminal Law, Experiential Learning
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Cane, Barbara H. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
The law review, it is suggested, is a species of publication that exists primarily to be written, not to be read. How the institution came into being, how a law review actually functions, and the consequences of the dominant law review pattern for legal education and the profession are examined. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Competitive Selection, Editing, Education Work Relationship
Law School Survey of Student Engagement, 2006
The Law School Survey of Student Engagement (LSSSE) documents dimensions of quality in legal education and provides information about law student participation in effective educational activities that law schools and other organizations can use to improve student learning. Since its inception in 2003, more than 64,000 law students at 111 different…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Legal Education (Professions), Law Schools, Law Students
Dutile, Fernand N., Ed. – 1981
Resulting from a conference co-sponsored by the Notre Dame Law School and the American Bar Association (ABA), this book explores recent innovations in legal education, specifically those "apprenticeship" programs in clinical and client counseling. Papers include: "The Problem of Teaching Lawyer Competency" (Fernand N. Dutile); "Opening Remarks"…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Competence, Computer Assisted Instruction, Counselor Client Relationship
Reed, Roark M. – New Directions for Experiential Learning, 1980
Specific techniques and instruments for evaluating and grading experiential programs in criminal justice education are provided. The approach utilizes student teams and accepts the evaluation and grading standards usually employed in traditional programs. Essential skills are listed and sample evaluation forms are provided. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Criminal Law, Experiential Learning, Group Instruction
Downs, Sylvester Ronald – 1992
This study uses an adaptation of the Illuminative Evaluation method in examining experiential learning through a case study of its application in practical legal training. The study's prime focus is on the experiential learning method known as the "current matter" process as conducted by the College of Law, Sydney (Australia). This…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Educational Research, Educational Testing, Evaluation Methods