Legal research professors have struggled with the question of assigning and using a text in class. Because there are many excellent legal research texts available, instructors may feel their students need the safety net of a printed textbook. For professors who decide to use a textbook, this article includes reviews of selected current legal research texts. On the other hand, professors may believe that many students do not read their legal research texts and prefer teaching without a textbook. Instead, they may use a series of web sites, PowerPoint slides, tutorials, podcasts, and electronic texts. The article discusses student reaction to a legal research course at Georgia State University College of Law that does not use a textbook
The American Bar Association (ABA), law students, and employers are demanding that law schools do be...
The use of a required text is an accepted practice in most college courses, but two-thirds of the st...
Previous work within the Faculty of Law, QUT had considered law students perceptions and use of tech...
This article attempts to further the literature on technology in the classroom by performing an init...
The best method for grasping legal research and legal analysis is to "just do it." Learning Legal Re...
Law schools are criticized for graduating students who lack the skills necessary to practice law. Le...
This Article presents a brief summary of the available research on those students who have used comp...
This article attempts to further the literature on technology in the classroom by performing an init...
Online instruction has great potential for accommodating the learning styles and preferences of Mill...
Textbooks intended for law school use should be evaluated in line with their intended purpose. The o...
This open source textbook authored by Amy Taylor was designed to provide University of Georgia Schoo...
In this Article, I will argue that, as legal educators, we must balance our use of technology for pe...
The idea of an electronic textbook (e-textbook) is nothing new. Among benefits of e-textbooks are t...
Faculty members take great care in selecting textbooks that present material in a meaningful way tha...
This article lays out an approach to teaching legal research through an examination of historical an...
The American Bar Association (ABA), law students, and employers are demanding that law schools do be...
The use of a required text is an accepted practice in most college courses, but two-thirds of the st...
Previous work within the Faculty of Law, QUT had considered law students perceptions and use of tech...
This article attempts to further the literature on technology in the classroom by performing an init...
The best method for grasping legal research and legal analysis is to "just do it." Learning Legal Re...
Law schools are criticized for graduating students who lack the skills necessary to practice law. Le...
This Article presents a brief summary of the available research on those students who have used comp...
This article attempts to further the literature on technology in the classroom by performing an init...
Online instruction has great potential for accommodating the learning styles and preferences of Mill...
Textbooks intended for law school use should be evaluated in line with their intended purpose. The o...
This open source textbook authored by Amy Taylor was designed to provide University of Georgia Schoo...
In this Article, I will argue that, as legal educators, we must balance our use of technology for pe...
The idea of an electronic textbook (e-textbook) is nothing new. Among benefits of e-textbooks are t...
Faculty members take great care in selecting textbooks that present material in a meaningful way tha...
This article lays out an approach to teaching legal research through an examination of historical an...
The American Bar Association (ABA), law students, and employers are demanding that law schools do be...
The use of a required text is an accepted practice in most college courses, but two-thirds of the st...
Previous work within the Faculty of Law, QUT had considered law students perceptions and use of tech...