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Higgins, Noelle; Dewhurst, Elaine; Watkins, Los – Research in Education, 2012
While field trips are often employed in primary and even second level education as a pedagogical tool, aimed at exposing students to real life experiences, such activities are not as popular at third level (Falk and Balling, 1982; Muse, Chiarelott and Davidman, 1982; Anderson and Zhang, 2003). However, such experiential learning techniques can be…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Teaching Methods, Field Trips, Law 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
Knerr, Charles R.; Sommerman, Andrew B. – 2000
This paper describes the use of simulated appellate court proceedings as an educational tool in U.S. undergraduate colleges and universities (and schools worldwide). Undergraduate moot court is less common in the United States than is the law school form of appellate simulation. Research shows that moot courts benefit students as they perform…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Internet, Law Students
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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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Brown, James M. – Journal of Legal Education, 1984
The Land Development Law course at George Washington University is an approach to teach the basic concepts of land management and control through a "game" simulation. Instead of studying the law, students actively participate in a simulated real-life environment where they can practice and develop their legal skills. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Court Litigation, Experiential Learning, Games
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Barnhizer, David R. – Journal of Legal Education, 1979
The clinical method of legal instruction, its goals, resources, and the process of individualized clinical teaching are defined. The development of such a program at Cleveland State University and a study of the activities involved are described. Issues of program design and teaching, including the student teacher relationship, are addressed. (JMD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Credits, Educational Objectives, Experiential Learning