This article contributes to current debates about the appropriate role of group work in legal curricula by providing insights into the attitudes of Bachelor of Laws (‘LLB’) and Juris Doctor (‘JD’) students towards such tasks. It begins by reviewing arguments for incorporating group work in legal education, both as a result of the recognition of its educational benefits, and as a response to increasing regulatory expectations regarding student collaboration skills. The article then reports the findings of a UNSW Law School Student Assessment Survey designed to determine how law students perceive group work and its assessment in law. One of the most striking findings is that many of the law students surveyed recognise and appreciate the learn...
Struggle is the common experience of first year students undertaking a degree in law in tertiary edu...
There is an abundance of literature on the importance of teamwork in undergraduate degrees; how to t...
This paper sets out the findings of a teaching development project undertaken with undergraduate law...
This paper focuses on the use of group assessments within higher education (HE) as a form of summati...
In the current regulatory climate, there is increasing expectation that law schools will be able to ...
In Western Australia the only means for graduates to qualify for admission as a legal practitioner a...
Growing awareness and interest in pedagogical issues permit greater experimentation with the design ...
This paper reports the results of a survey of law students by written questionnaire concerning the i...
Assessing students is an essential part of any university law course. Traditional forms of assessmen...
Many students are driven by their perceptions of assessment, and consequently, assessment can be use...
Despite law firms’ demand for first year associates who can work collaboratively, teamwork is infreq...
Assessment has widely been described as being ‘at the centre of the student experience’. It would be...
The authors of this article had not taught or researched together before developing a new elective c...
Law school programs are increasingly expanding collaborative experiences for their students. In many...
Clinical legal education (CLE) should be a mandatory or core course in the LLB curriculum and the fo...
Struggle is the common experience of first year students undertaking a degree in law in tertiary edu...
There is an abundance of literature on the importance of teamwork in undergraduate degrees; how to t...
This paper sets out the findings of a teaching development project undertaken with undergraduate law...
This paper focuses on the use of group assessments within higher education (HE) as a form of summati...
In the current regulatory climate, there is increasing expectation that law schools will be able to ...
In Western Australia the only means for graduates to qualify for admission as a legal practitioner a...
Growing awareness and interest in pedagogical issues permit greater experimentation with the design ...
This paper reports the results of a survey of law students by written questionnaire concerning the i...
Assessing students is an essential part of any university law course. Traditional forms of assessmen...
Many students are driven by their perceptions of assessment, and consequently, assessment can be use...
Despite law firms’ demand for first year associates who can work collaboratively, teamwork is infreq...
Assessment has widely been described as being ‘at the centre of the student experience’. It would be...
The authors of this article had not taught or researched together before developing a new elective c...
Law school programs are increasingly expanding collaborative experiences for their students. In many...
Clinical legal education (CLE) should be a mandatory or core course in the LLB curriculum and the fo...
Struggle is the common experience of first year students undertaking a degree in law in tertiary edu...
There is an abundance of literature on the importance of teamwork in undergraduate degrees; how to t...
This paper sets out the findings of a teaching development project undertaken with undergraduate law...