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Burton, Kelley – Journal of Learning Design, 2017
The Australian Learning and Teaching Council's Bachelor of Laws Learning and Teaching Academic Standards Statement identified "thinking skills" as one of the six threshold learning outcomes for a Bachelor of Laws Program, which reinforced the significance of learning, teaching and assessing "thinking skills" in law schools…
Descriptors: Criterion Referenced Tests, Foreign Countries, Scoring Rubrics, Lawyers
Shemshuchenko, Yurii S.; Gerasymova, Elvira M.; Vykhovanets, Zorina S.; Mosenkis, Iurii L.; Strokal, Oleksandr M. – International Journal of Higher Education, 2020
The objective of this study was to find out how effective the use of cloud technologies is in the formation and development of critical thinking in future lawyers. An experimental model using cloud technologies was tested in training courses in the special (Civil Law, Fundamentals of Administrative Law) and general (English for Specific Purposes,…
Descriptors: Law Students, Legal Education (Professions), Computer Software, Critical Thinking
Nievelstein, Fleurie; van Gog, Tamara; van Dijck, Gijs; Boshuizen, Henny P. A. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2013
The worked example effect indicates that learning by studying worked examples is more effective than learning by solving the equivalent problems. The expertise reversal effect indicates that this is only the case for novice learners; once prior knowledge of the task is available problem solving becomes more effective for learning. These effects,…
Descriptors: Law Students, Novices, Expertise, Court Litigation
Traverse, Maria A. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Research on post-graduate performance, pertaining to law school graduates, indicates that success in the legal profession is attributable to more than the theoretical content or cognitive knowledge obtained through educational curricula. Research suggests that the combination of creative and analytic thinking skills contributes to a higher rate of…
Descriptors: Law Students, Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions), Graduates
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
Nievelstein, Fleurie; van Gog, Tamara; Boshuizen, Henny P. A.; Prins, Frans J. – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2010
Due to the complexity of the legal domain, reasoning about law cases is a very complex skill. For novices in law school, legal reasoning is even more complex because they have not yet acquired the conceptual knowledge needed for distilling the relevant information from cases, determining applicable rules, and searching for rules and exceptions in…
Descriptors: Law Students, Advanced Students, Law Schools, Knowledge Level
Nadolski, Rob J.; Kirschner, Paul A.; van Merrienboer, Jeroen J. G. – Learning and Instruction, 2006
Whole tasks for acquiring complex skills are often too difficult for novices. To solve this problem, "process support" divides the problem solving into phases, offers driving questions, and provides feedback. A multimedia program was used to teach sophomore law students ("N"=82) to prepare and carry out a plea. In a randomised 2x2 design with the…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Learning Processes, Legal Education (Professions), Problem Solving
Camilli, Gregory; Wang, Ming-mei; Fesq, Jaqueline – 1992
The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) was examined to see if the items on a form could be divided into different subgroups in which items looked statistically similar within the subgroups but statistically different between subgroups. Of such subgrouping can be detected, it is likely that the subgroups of items measure different abilities, and the…
Descriptors: Admission (School), College Entrance Examinations, Factor Analysis, Item Response Theory
Hummel, Hans G. K.; Paas, Fred; Koper, E. J. R. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2004
We investigate the effects of cueing, in a multimedia programme for the individualized training of the whole task to prepare a plea, on the learning outcomes of 43 sophomore law students. The cueing formats of worked-out examples (WOEs), process worksheets (PWs), and both WOE and PW are compared to a no-cueing control condition. Our hypotheses…
Descriptors: Law Students, Multimedia Instruction, Cues, Comparative Analysis
Wangerin, Paul T. – University of Miami Law Review, 1986
This paper describes a systematic method for teaching first year law students dialectical skills. An introductory section, Part I, critiques the traditional format for law education noting that at most schools, instruction in substantive courses impart knowledge but not the skills lawyers need in practicing their professions. Part II discusses, in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Law Students, Learning Activities, Learning Strategies

Bartolo, Laura M. – Research Strategies, 1991
Relates bibliographic instruction concepts to the teaching of legal research at the undergraduate level and describes a conceptual framework for teaching legal research and critical thinking skills to a journalism class. Legal research instruction for law students is also described, the expected retention level is considered, and the librarian's…
Descriptors: Course Integrated Library Instruction, Critical Thinking, Higher Education, Journalism Education
Wangerin, Paul T. – Albany Law Review, 1988
This law review article provides useful guidance on learning strategies for law students drawing heavily on the literature of educational psychology and learning theory. An introductory section describes the traditional law school approach which has been for professors to inundate students with substantive and procedural rules of law but rarely if…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Law Students, Learning Activities, Learning Strategies
Wangerin, Paul T. – Hastings Law Jounal, 1989
This article attempts to bridge a perceived gap between legal education and education theory as well as the gap between academic counseling and independent learning by examining law school academic support programs. The article argues that a multidisciplinary analysis provides a helpful basis for evaluating academic support programs that address…
Descriptors: Academic Advising, Academic Failure, Educational Counseling, Faculty Advisers