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Bangeni, Bongi; Greenbaum, Lesley – Reading & Writing: Journal of the Reading Association of South Africa, 2019
Background: From 2020, the Law faculty has decided to discontinue the five-year Extended Curriculum Programme (ECP) stream within the Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree for a variety of reasons, including students' perceptions of stigma, the poor throughput rate of this stream and the identified need to extend academic support to more students in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Bachelors Degrees, Law Students
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Wood, Graham – Journal of Problem Based Learning in Higher Education, 2020
An interdisciplinary approach has been adopted for undergraduate Law and Social Science students attending separate seven-week intensive language communication courses run at the University of Helsinki. The challenge has been to anchor this pedagogical development within theoretical frames of reference that contextualise the interdisciplinary PBL…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Problem Based Learning, Conflict Resolution, Communication Skills
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Tymon, Alex; Harrison, Charlotte; Batistic, Sasa – Studies in Higher Education, 2020
This paper evaluates 'brand me' presentations as a method for developing employability-related self-confidence (ERSC). Measurements of ERSC were taken at three points in time from a sample of 105 full-time business and law students at a UK university. These were analysed alongside student feedback, assessment artefacts, and semi-structured…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Law Students, Business Administration Education, Employment Potential
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Nebeska, Marina S.; Provorova, Yevheniia M.; Gerasymova, Elvira M.; Vykhovanets, Zorina S.; Yepryntsev, Pylyp S. – International Journal of Higher Education, 2020
The article urges the problem of enhancing the academic activity of law students as one of the ways of improving the efficiency and quality of professional training. The nature and structure of academic activity of future lawyers are covered. Thus, academic activity is a form of a human activity, which structure is viewed through the prism of…
Descriptors: Law Students, Legal Education (Professions), Student Motivation, Career Choice
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Sia, Chin Chin; Amirnuddin, Puteri Sofia – International Journal of Curriculum and Instruction, 2020
In tertiary legal education, self-regulated learning is demonstrated through active goal-directed, self-control of behaviour, motivation, and cognition for assessment tasks by an individual learner. Self-regulated learning involves a recursive cycle, involving three phases: forethought, performance and reflection. Through the creation of LinkedIn…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Web Sites, Social Networks, Law Students
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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
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Pretorius, Jannie – Teaching Artist Journal, 2018
In this essay, the author explores what educationalists can learn from studying "The Paper Chase." The rise and decline of the Socratic method and the importance of the hidden curriculum are highlighted.
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Films
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Pickering, Kristin – Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, 2018
This article explores different types of emotion a student experiences as she interns at a public defender's office and proposes several "emotion rules" based on her experience. After a literature review that locates emotions within the identity-construction process, the author analyzes data from reflective questionnaires to identify…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Internship Programs, Emotional Experience, Student Experience
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Deo, Meera E. – Teachers College Record, 2023
Background/Context: Law students of color have been struggling to recover from the heightened challenges they endured during the first two years of the pandemic. Struggles with food insecurity, financial anxiety, and emotional strain contribute to declining academic success for populations that were marginalized on law school campuses long before…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Student Needs
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Khashimova, Dildora; Niyazova, Nasiba; Nasirova, Umida; Israilova, Dildora; Khikmatov, Nodir; Fayziev, Shakhram – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
In this scientific article we take a look about education and that, one of the important components in the education of future specialists is language training. So, the main goal of teaching languages at a university is the formation and improvement of skills and abilities in the educational and professional sphere of communication, both orally…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Multimedia Instruction, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Manley, Stewart – English in Education, 2018
Since 2012, I have been using home-made poetry to supplement my teaching of trust law. My experience illustrates how English -- in this case poetry -- can enhance teaching in other fields. Poetry can capture complex concepts in understandable and memorable ways, provide the human context behind abstract principles and increase authenticity in the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Laws, Legal Education (Professions)
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Ashford, José B.; Lateef, Husain – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
The "Miller v. Alabama" decision found mandatory juvenile life sentences without the possibility of parole unconstitutional and extended the "Graham v. Florida" requirements to offenders convicted of a homicidal offense. This development in case law provides law and social work students with opportunities for learning to work…
Descriptors: Homicide, Criminals, Juvenile Justice, Correctional Institutions
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Okulich-Kazarin, Valery; Zhurba, Mykola; Bokhonkova, Yuliia; Losiyevska, Olga – European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2019
The aim of the study was a verification of statistical hypotheses about the preferences of Ukrainian and Polish Law-students related the method of learning at lectures. There were two groups of Ukrainian Law-students and one group of Polish Law-students. The main research methods were the methods of sociological research. There are statistically…
Descriptors: Law Students, Preferences, Student Attitudes, Cognitive Style
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Taylor, Pimsiri; Tubpun, Tida; Burford, James – rEFLections, 2022
In Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand, higher education internationalisation agendas have increasingly shifted from studying abroad to offering 'international' English-medium instruction (EMI) programmes at home. This qualitative study explores the perceptions of seventeen domestic undergraduate students in the disciplines of Law and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Law Students, Business Administration Education
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Thornton, Margaret – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
University law schools have been beset with a sense of schizophrenia ever since first established in the 19th century. They were unsure as to whether they were free to teach and research in the same way as the humanities or whether they were constrained by the presuppositions of legal practice. More recently, this tension has been overshadowed by…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Neoliberalism
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