I focus in this Article on a particular way to assess student learning in a Business Associations course. Those of us involved in legal education for the past few years know that “assessment” has been a buzzword...or a bugaboo...or both. The American Bar Association (ABA) has focused law schools on assessment (institutional and pedagogical), and that focus is not, in my view, misplaced. Until relatively recently, much of student assessment in law school doctrinal courses was rote behavior, seemingly driven by heuristics and resulting in something constituting (or at least resembling) information cascades or other herding behaviors. In the fall of 2011, I began offering an oral midterm examination to students in my Business Associations cour...
Many professors are bristling over the recent changes to the American Bar Association (ABA) Standard...
Incorporating skills training into a traditional Business Associations course is challenging. This c...
The Legal Education Committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel has had extensive ...
I focus in this Article on a particular way to assess student learning in a Business Associations co...
Over the past ten years, the doctrinal rules governing business associations have become more comple...
This Article discusses having students in a Business Associations course think about the potential r...
The American Bar Association now requires law schools to incorporate formative assessment into the l...
Integrating entrepreneurship into Business Associations through an emphasis on start-up and small bu...
This paper argues for increased coverage of the law of agency and alternative entities in business a...
Business Organizations is a pedagogically rich book that recaptures student engagement in the course...
American Bar Association ( ABA ) Standard 314, Assessment of Student Learning, requires law schools ...
Business Organizations: An Experiential Approach seeks to prepare students for the bar exam, upper-l...
Those of us teaching the Business Associations course in law schools are almost universally presente...
Business clients often view lawyers as obstructionists who do little more than tell them they cannot...
Relatively recently, the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) claims that experiential legal ...
Many professors are bristling over the recent changes to the American Bar Association (ABA) Standard...
Incorporating skills training into a traditional Business Associations course is challenging. This c...
The Legal Education Committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel has had extensive ...
I focus in this Article on a particular way to assess student learning in a Business Associations co...
Over the past ten years, the doctrinal rules governing business associations have become more comple...
This Article discusses having students in a Business Associations course think about the potential r...
The American Bar Association now requires law schools to incorporate formative assessment into the l...
Integrating entrepreneurship into Business Associations through an emphasis on start-up and small bu...
This paper argues for increased coverage of the law of agency and alternative entities in business a...
Business Organizations is a pedagogically rich book that recaptures student engagement in the course...
American Bar Association ( ABA ) Standard 314, Assessment of Student Learning, requires law schools ...
Business Organizations: An Experiential Approach seeks to prepare students for the bar exam, upper-l...
Those of us teaching the Business Associations course in law schools are almost universally presente...
Business clients often view lawyers as obstructionists who do little more than tell them they cannot...
Relatively recently, the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) claims that experiential legal ...
Many professors are bristling over the recent changes to the American Bar Association (ABA) Standard...
Incorporating skills training into a traditional Business Associations course is challenging. This c...
The Legal Education Committee of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel has had extensive ...