The American jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes once famously said that “[t]he life of law has not been logic; it has been experience”. This paper examines the experiential learning technique of simulation, particularly the use of moot courts and mock trials, in the context of legal education. It provides an overview of extant literature along with an outline of the current place of simulation activities in Irish legal education and the results of a project carried out to examine the efficacy of simulation activities as a teaching and learning tool. The development of formal legal education and the place of mooting within both academic and vocational training are considered within this paper. The combination of the literature rev...
Description Not only did I learn more substantive law than in any other course I\u27ve taken, but ...
In no Common Law jurisdiction is simulation regarded as part of law’s “signature pedagogy.” Yet othe...
[EN] The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate student learning opportunities using a profession...
The American jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes once famously said that “[t]he life of law has not been lo...
Moot courts and mock trials are included in various ways in law curricula in different jurisdictions...
The concept of arguing aspects of legal scenarios in order to facilitate student learning within the...
Authentic learning activities offer a significant contribution to legal education. Legal practice si...
Underlying this move toward game-based learning environments is more than strategic opportunity or m...
Simulation in legal education has come of age. Once confined to moot court exercises and trial pract...
Mooting, also known as a mock trial, is a form of simulated learning that is frequently used in lega...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in entertainment and training, but has so far...
Conference Theme: Directions in Legal EducationParallel Sessions 2 - Group 4: Engaged Learning: Simu...
Competitive mooting is very popular among Australian law schools and Australian law students perform...
The use of virtual simulations in Legal Education as a method for learning is relatively rare despit...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in education and training as well as entertai...
Description Not only did I learn more substantive law than in any other course I\u27ve taken, but ...
In no Common Law jurisdiction is simulation regarded as part of law’s “signature pedagogy.” Yet othe...
[EN] The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate student learning opportunities using a profession...
The American jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes once famously said that “[t]he life of law has not been lo...
Moot courts and mock trials are included in various ways in law curricula in different jurisdictions...
The concept of arguing aspects of legal scenarios in order to facilitate student learning within the...
Authentic learning activities offer a significant contribution to legal education. Legal practice si...
Underlying this move toward game-based learning environments is more than strategic opportunity or m...
Simulation in legal education has come of age. Once confined to moot court exercises and trial pract...
Mooting, also known as a mock trial, is a form of simulated learning that is frequently used in lega...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in entertainment and training, but has so far...
Conference Theme: Directions in Legal EducationParallel Sessions 2 - Group 4: Engaged Learning: Simu...
Competitive mooting is very popular among Australian law schools and Australian law students perform...
The use of virtual simulations in Legal Education as a method for learning is relatively rare despit...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in education and training as well as entertai...
Description Not only did I learn more substantive law than in any other course I\u27ve taken, but ...
In no Common Law jurisdiction is simulation regarded as part of law’s “signature pedagogy.” Yet othe...
[EN] The main goal of this paper is to demonstrate student learning opportunities using a profession...