Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 15 |
Teachers | 5 |
Students | 2 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
Bar Examinations | 1 |
Beck Depression Inventory | 1 |
SAT (College Admission Test) | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Student Lawyer, 1981
Major companies that offer streamlined, standardized bar review courses available in various media are listed, and state bar associations and licensing procedures are outlined for each state. (Journal availability: 1155 E. 60th St., Chicago, IL 60637, $1.00.) (MSE)
Descriptors: Certification, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Law Students

Widerstrom, A. H.; And Others – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1979
The validity of the College Board Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) Verbal and Math scores as predictors of college freshmen's grade point average was examined on a sample of college freshmen and then cross-validated on a separate sample of freshmen law and justice students. Correlations were low to moderate. (JKS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Entrance Examinations, Grade Point Average, Higher Education

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
Rothman, Mitchell Lewis – 1980
The early development of university legal education in England, the United States, and Germany is examined. Focus is on: (1) the different historical and social processes that have brought law and higher education together and (2) examination of a more general, comparative nature about the institutional transformation of legal education in these…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Comparative Education, Education Work Relationship, Educational History
Roberts, Steven V. – New York Times, 1978
Describes Temple Law School's unusual Special Admissions and Curriculum Experiments Program, which reserves one quarter of its enrollment for the disadvantaged, whatever their color or ethnic background, who show exceptional promise. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Affirmative Action, Case Studies, Disadvantaged

Halpern, Stephen C. – Journal of Legal Education, 1982
The law is seen as the single most powerful social force preserving and legitimating the prevailing distribution of power in U.S. society. Questions of social justice ought not to be irrelevant or peripheral to the study of law. Meaningful and enduring change in legal education is seen as illusory. (MLW)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Higher Education, Law Schools, Law Students

Stillman, Paula L.; And Others – Journal of Legal Education, 1982
The use of client instructors to teach and evaluate interviewing skills at the University of Arizona College of Law is described. The trained client instructors function in the multiple roles of client, teacher, and evaluator of interviewing skills of law students. (MLW)
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Interpersonal Competence

Murphy, Cornelius F. – Ohio Northern University Law Review, 1979
The traditional practice of training lawyers in an academic setting only is challenged, and it is proposed that an apprenticeship or field experience element be added. The responsibility for this lies with both the academic and legal communities. Available from Ohio Northern University, 525 S. Main St., Ada, OH 45810; $5.00. (MSE)
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Cooperative Education, Educational Change, Educational History

Spector, Bruce R. – Journal of Legal Education, 1980
In order to give direction to his career and specifically to his remaining year of law school, the author, a law student at Emory University, interrupted his schooling to spend a year in self-selected legal clerkships. His experiences and a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of such a program are presented. (JMD)
Descriptors: Career Development, Career Planning, Comparative Analysis, Experiential Learning

Dillon, J. T. – Journal of Legal Education, 1980
It is argued that the Socratic method of teaching law as depicted in the book, movie, and TV series "Paper Chase" is not really the Socratic method at all. The genuine Socratic method and the questioning technique used in "Paper Chase" are examined and their appropriateness and effectiveness as methods for teaching contract law…
Descriptors: Contracts, Course Objectives, Educational Objectives, Higher Education

Shanfield, Stephen B.; Benjamin, Andrew H. – Journal of Legal Education, 1985
A study of the distress experienced by male and female law students in all three years of law school, as measured by a validated psychiatric symptom survey insrument, also compared the distress of law students to that of with medical students. (MSE)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Females, Higher Education

Journal of Legal Education, 1984
Small-group learning, it is suggested, has several benefits for law students that they cannot otherwise obtain. The work of scholars in the social sciences can help to better understand ways in which to structure and facilitate the use of small groups in the law school curriculum. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Higher Education, Law Schools, Law Students
Hedegard, James M. – American Bar Foundation Research Journal, 1979
A survey at Brigham Young University's J. Reuben Clark Law School examined student expectations and their fulfillment, career specialization interests, changes in attitudes toward the legal profession, and personality changes. It was found that the desired student maturation often does not occur. Available from Am. Bar Fdn., 1155 East 60th St.,…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Career Choice, Higher Education, Interest Research
Shaffer, Thomas L.; Redmount, Robert S. – 1977
Despite the myths and the movies, law teaching does little more than the most obvious things for its students. It is a sometimes clever, often boring, initiation rite for the legal profession, and it serves up reams of information about the law. However, the materials of law are the materials of human beings, and these experiences have to be…
Descriptors: College Role, Educational Environment, Humanism, Humanistic Education
Statsky, William P. – 1974
The textbook, written for first year law students and for paralegals, or legal assistants, attempts to break down the components of legal research and writing and to identify effective starting points for these activities. It was designed for use in a classroom setting or on-the-job as a dictionary/reference source. The first part, Legal Research,…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Law Libraries, Law Students, Laws