The Legal Education and Training Review identified gaps in law students’ key skills development and this paper considers how skills training in three key areas of mooting, negotiation and client interviewing can bemaximised so that law students have a sense of themselves as lawyer as well as law student from the beginning of their legal education. The research identifies numerous benefits to learning law through skillsbased activities, but also discovers some possible apprehensions about participating from a student perspective. This paper draws on data taken fromstudents who engaged in short-term optional courses in client interviewing, negotiation and/or mooting and considers the responses to a survey conducted prior to participation, a r...
Learning Law is an indispensable guide for students beginning their law studies. It provides the fou...
The aim of this Article is to examine the place of skills in the law school curriculum and to urge t...
Preprint of a paper by Avrom Sherr, Woolf Professor of Legal Education, Institute of Advanced Legal ...
The Legal Education and Training Review identified gaps in law students’ key skills development and ...
Private practice has a strong hold on what is taught at Law Schools across Australia. To give studen...
Legal education focuses on case analysis, without instruction on practice with clients. Social worke...
Law students as well as the companies that recruit recent graduates have identified a gap between wh...
This Article will explore the issues that arise as more and more law schools face important definiti...
The Legal Education Committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel has had extensive ...
Welcome to the “Future of Law,” a new column that will appear regularly in the Michigan Bar Journal....
How will law schools meet the challenge of expanding their education in lawyering skills as demanded...
As a result of several recent studies and changes in the ABA\u27s Standards for Approval of Law Scho...
Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking...
Purpose - The objective of this study was to examine the role of legal learning space in a Malaysian...
Learning Legal Skills and Reasoning is a method and skills book designed to underpin law students’ s...
Learning Law is an indispensable guide for students beginning their law studies. It provides the fou...
The aim of this Article is to examine the place of skills in the law school curriculum and to urge t...
Preprint of a paper by Avrom Sherr, Woolf Professor of Legal Education, Institute of Advanced Legal ...
The Legal Education and Training Review identified gaps in law students’ key skills development and ...
Private practice has a strong hold on what is taught at Law Schools across Australia. To give studen...
Legal education focuses on case analysis, without instruction on practice with clients. Social worke...
Law students as well as the companies that recruit recent graduates have identified a gap between wh...
This Article will explore the issues that arise as more and more law schools face important definiti...
The Legal Education Committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel has had extensive ...
Welcome to the “Future of Law,” a new column that will appear regularly in the Michigan Bar Journal....
How will law schools meet the challenge of expanding their education in lawyering skills as demanded...
As a result of several recent studies and changes in the ABA\u27s Standards for Approval of Law Scho...
Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking...
Purpose - The objective of this study was to examine the role of legal learning space in a Malaysian...
Learning Legal Skills and Reasoning is a method and skills book designed to underpin law students’ s...
Learning Law is an indispensable guide for students beginning their law studies. It provides the fou...
The aim of this Article is to examine the place of skills in the law school curriculum and to urge t...
Preprint of a paper by Avrom Sherr, Woolf Professor of Legal Education, Institute of Advanced Legal ...