With the shift in American Bar Association (ABA) accreditation standards to emphasize learning outcomes, all law schools will be slowly moving away from structure-and-process based legal education (exposure to specific content for specified periods of time, such as a four credit one semester contracts course) to competency-based legal education (focus on the ultimate competencies needed for excellent service to the clients and the legal system, such as competence in career-long professional development). A large number of law schools are adopting what the next section of this Article defines as competency-based professional-formation or ethical- professional-identity learning outcomes. The specific focus of this Article is on versions of th...
With the widespread criticism of legal education and the proposed changes to the American Bar Associ...
Law school institutional learning outcomes require measuring nuanced skills that develop over time. ...
Imagine that faculty and staff, working together, could help each law student grow over three years ...
With the shift in American Bar Association (ABA) accreditation standards to emphasize learning outco...
The new ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools (“ABA Standards”) require l...
The legal community has talked for years about proposed changes to the American Bar Association\u27s...
Part I of this Article will outline the accreditation requirements for developing and publishing lea...
This Article details a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiring s...
This Article will detail a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiri...
The American Bar Association now requires law schools to incorporate formative assessment into the l...
Many professors are bristling over the recent changes to the American Bar Association (ABA) Standard...
The ABA is going to change the accreditation standards to require more emphasis on fostering each st...
For over a decade, there has been agreement among legal educators that assessments are a critical to...
The Carnegie Foundation\u27s 2007 study of legal education, Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the P...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
With the widespread criticism of legal education and the proposed changes to the American Bar Associ...
Law school institutional learning outcomes require measuring nuanced skills that develop over time. ...
Imagine that faculty and staff, working together, could help each law student grow over three years ...
With the shift in American Bar Association (ABA) accreditation standards to emphasize learning outco...
The new ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools (“ABA Standards”) require l...
The legal community has talked for years about proposed changes to the American Bar Association\u27s...
Part I of this Article will outline the accreditation requirements for developing and publishing lea...
This Article details a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiring s...
This Article will detail a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiri...
The American Bar Association now requires law schools to incorporate formative assessment into the l...
Many professors are bristling over the recent changes to the American Bar Association (ABA) Standard...
The ABA is going to change the accreditation standards to require more emphasis on fostering each st...
For over a decade, there has been agreement among legal educators that assessments are a critical to...
The Carnegie Foundation\u27s 2007 study of legal education, Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the P...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
With the widespread criticism of legal education and the proposed changes to the American Bar Associ...
Law school institutional learning outcomes require measuring nuanced skills that develop over time. ...
Imagine that faculty and staff, working together, could help each law student grow over three years ...