Given the ever increasing importance of legislation to the resolution of legal disputes, there is a concomitant need for law students to be well trained in the anatomy, identification, interpretation and application of laws made by or under parliament. This article discusses a blended learning project called Indigo’s Folly, implemented at the Queensland University of Technology Law School in 2014. Indigo’s Folly was created to increase law student competency with respect to statutory interpretation. Just as importantly, it was designed to make the teaching of statutory interpretation more interesting – to “bring the sexy” to the student statutory interpretation experience. Quantitative and qualitative empirical data will be presented as...
Contemporary higher education, including legal education, incorporates complexities that were not id...
Learning the law1 is an online teachers' kit of simplified education materials addressing the l...
17.1 Up until the 1990s the methods used to teach the law had evolved little since the first law sch...
With the growing proliferation of statute laws, the skill of statutory interpretation is an increasi...
In the Australian legal environment today the overwhelming importance of laws made by Parliament is ...
Focus on the quality of law graduates is not a new phenomenon. The Threshold Learning Outcomes, CALD...
[Extract] I started my LLM thesis when I was still in private practice. My thesis was designed to ta...
A clear and accessible guide to one of the most important skills all students of law must master: th...
In this Primer, our aims are to explain what statutory interpretation is and why it is important. We...
This book is designed to teach statutory interpretation skills. It uses a combination of traditional...
Legal Interpreting (LI) can be considered a specialised branch of Community Interpreting (CI). It en...
Research Background:Law is taught by increasing numbers of sessional staff, many inadequately versed...
This thesis is an exploratory and quasi-experimental project about legal education in Australia – in...
A traditional approach centred on weekly lectures, perhaps supported by a tutorial programme, still ...
Report of a CELT project on supporting students through innovation and researchThe study of law requ...
Contemporary higher education, including legal education, incorporates complexities that were not id...
Learning the law1 is an online teachers' kit of simplified education materials addressing the l...
17.1 Up until the 1990s the methods used to teach the law had evolved little since the first law sch...
With the growing proliferation of statute laws, the skill of statutory interpretation is an increasi...
In the Australian legal environment today the overwhelming importance of laws made by Parliament is ...
Focus on the quality of law graduates is not a new phenomenon. The Threshold Learning Outcomes, CALD...
[Extract] I started my LLM thesis when I was still in private practice. My thesis was designed to ta...
A clear and accessible guide to one of the most important skills all students of law must master: th...
In this Primer, our aims are to explain what statutory interpretation is and why it is important. We...
This book is designed to teach statutory interpretation skills. It uses a combination of traditional...
Legal Interpreting (LI) can be considered a specialised branch of Community Interpreting (CI). It en...
Research Background:Law is taught by increasing numbers of sessional staff, many inadequately versed...
This thesis is an exploratory and quasi-experimental project about legal education in Australia – in...
A traditional approach centred on weekly lectures, perhaps supported by a tutorial programme, still ...
Report of a CELT project on supporting students through innovation and researchThe study of law requ...
Contemporary higher education, including legal education, incorporates complexities that were not id...
Learning the law1 is an online teachers' kit of simplified education materials addressing the l...
17.1 Up until the 1990s the methods used to teach the law had evolved little since the first law sch...