One of the main aims of law education in both the Civil (European-Continental) law and Common (Anglo-Saxon) law systems is to teach students to reason about cases. As reviewed in Chapter 1, students experience serious difficulties in learning to reason about cases, which seem to arise from the complexity of the domain, the way in which knowledge is acquired in complex domains, as well as the instructional approach widely used in law schools. This approach often consists of ‘learning by doing’, which means that students have to reason about lots of cases throughout their study by using information sources that professionals also use. The studies presented in Chapters 2 to 4 were designed to gain more insight in the kind of difficulties and t...
There are many difficulties in teaching the law. These problems are often referred to generically as...
The casebook method of teaching is, in fact, an exercise in futility. It is the students themselves ...
Nievelstein, F. (2009). Learning law. Expertise differences and the effect of instructional support....
One of the main aims of law education in both the Civil (European-Continental) law and Common (Anglo...
Learning Legal Skills and Reasoning is a method and skills book designed to underpin law students’ s...
Due to the complexity of the legal domain, reasoning about law cases is a very complex skill. For no...
Expert Learning for Law Students is designed to help law students build the analytical skills necess...
Learning Law is an indispensable guide for students beginning their law studies. It provides the fou...
Reasoning about legal cases is a complex skill that imposes a high working memory load,especially fo...
This article explores the relationship between students\u27 knowledge of underlying legal doctrine a...
The ability to read legal cases is one of the most essential skills for law students to be successfu...
The ability to read legal cases is one of the most essential skills for law students to be successfu...
Being a lawyer requires understanding the process of the law — a mastery of legal logic — rather tha...
Until recent years there was but one system of teaching law in the schools. It was the good old syst...
During the past thirty years, clinical legal education has become an important component of most law...
There are many difficulties in teaching the law. These problems are often referred to generically as...
The casebook method of teaching is, in fact, an exercise in futility. It is the students themselves ...
Nievelstein, F. (2009). Learning law. Expertise differences and the effect of instructional support....
One of the main aims of law education in both the Civil (European-Continental) law and Common (Anglo...
Learning Legal Skills and Reasoning is a method and skills book designed to underpin law students’ s...
Due to the complexity of the legal domain, reasoning about law cases is a very complex skill. For no...
Expert Learning for Law Students is designed to help law students build the analytical skills necess...
Learning Law is an indispensable guide for students beginning their law studies. It provides the fou...
Reasoning about legal cases is a complex skill that imposes a high working memory load,especially fo...
This article explores the relationship between students\u27 knowledge of underlying legal doctrine a...
The ability to read legal cases is one of the most essential skills for law students to be successfu...
The ability to read legal cases is one of the most essential skills for law students to be successfu...
Being a lawyer requires understanding the process of the law — a mastery of legal logic — rather tha...
Until recent years there was but one system of teaching law in the schools. It was the good old syst...
During the past thirty years, clinical legal education has become an important component of most law...
There are many difficulties in teaching the law. These problems are often referred to generically as...
The casebook method of teaching is, in fact, an exercise in futility. It is the students themselves ...
Nievelstein, F. (2009). Learning law. Expertise differences and the effect of instructional support....