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Thornton, Margaret – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
The discourse around student wellness is a marked feature of the 21st century Australian legal academy. It has resulted in various initiatives on the part of law schools, including the development of a national forum. The phenomenon relates to psychological distress reported by students through surveys. Proposed remedies tend to focus on improving…
Descriptors: Law Students, Well Being, Neoliberalism, Higher Education
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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
Patrick Allan Smith – ProQuest LLC, 2014
Using a case study methodology with descriptive and qualitative techniques at a major law school in the South, this research study explored factors that contribute to the perceived pedagogical value of wiki technology in legal education, as well as attitudes and perceptions of law faculty and students regarding the effectiveness of using wikis as…
Descriptors: Web 2.0 Technologies, Technology Uses in Education, Higher Education, Web Sites
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Stallman, Helen – Higher Education Research and Development, 2012
This qualitative study investigated the role of competition in the success and distress of law students. Participants from an Australian law faculty attended one of four focus groups (undergraduate, postgraduate, academic staff and administrative staff). They discussed their perceptions of competition, the competitive behaviours in law students,…
Descriptors: Competition, Foreign Countries, Focus Groups, Law Students
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Owen, Susanne; Davis, Gary – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2011
Australian higher education institutions are increasingly operating within broader political, economic and social frameworks and the global context. The link between productivity and high level skills and qualifications and the importance of establishing a systematic process for ensuring increased participation of those from under-represented…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Higher Education
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)
Detwiler, Robert R. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The literature on student academic success of law students is limited to mostly single institution studies, and as such, a nationwide, multi-institutional empirical study of the factors that predict student academic success is greatly needed by higher education scholars, law school admission officers, faculty, and administrators. This dissertation…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Entrance Examinations, Learner Engagement, Grade Point Average
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
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Gottfredson, Nisha C.; Panter, A. T.; Daye, Charles E.; Allen, Walter F.; Wightman, Linda F. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2009
Controversy surrounding the use of race-conscious admissions can be partially resolved with improved empirical knowledge of the effects of racial diversity in educational settings. We use a national sample of law students nested in 64 law schools to test the complex and largely untested theory regarding the effects of educational diversity on…
Descriptors: Law Students, Race, Law Schools, Structural Equation Models
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Nicholls, Emma; Walsh, Margaret – Education & Training, 2007
Purpose: This case study aims to provide a critical evaluation of the decision by the University of Wolverhampton's School of Legal Studies to develop a number of work-based learning modules, offered as part of the undergraduate programme. It seeks to examine why the School has taken the approach of embedding work-based learning into what has…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Learning Modules, Criticism, Law Students
Breland, Hunter M.; Hart, Frederick M. – 1994
This study examined legal writing as it was represented in legal memoranda prepared by first-semester law students at 12 different law schools. The study was based on the cumulative judgments of the instructors and professors of law in those institutions, humanities specialists at the Educational Testing Service, and two legal consultants. A…
Descriptors: Definitions, Higher Education, Law Schools, Law Students
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Siegfried, John J. – Journal of Economic Education, 1980
Reports a study which examined the performance of 41 law students in an Economic Analysis of Law course. Conclusions are that prior formal study of economics appears to have no effect on performance in law school economics courses. The main determinant is performance in other law school courses. (KC)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Economics Education, Educational Background, Higher Education
Breland, Hunter M.; Carlton, Sydell T.; Taylor, Susan – 1998
Based on the results of a Phase 1 investigation into the nature of legal writing, a prototype writing assessment, the Diagnostic Writing Skills Test (DWST) for entering law students was developed. The DWST is composed of two multiple-choice testlets based on prompts and responses to the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) Writing Sample. It contains…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Law Schools, Law Students, Questionnaires
Thornton, Andrea E.; Reese, Lynda M.; Pashley, Peter J. – 1998
Test takers were asked to report which, if any, methods they used to help prepare for the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). The study began with the 1991-1992 academic testing year and ended with the 1996-1997 academic testing year. More than 100,000 students responded in each of the years, with the exception of a smaller sample in 1996-1997…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Higher Education, Law Schools, Law Students
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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