Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking skills, and develop practical legal knowledge in non-lawyers. Law students at Georgetown began using Street Law methods to teach high school classes in the 1970s. While Street Law was designed to help high school students, the programs were also crafted to provide authentic experiential opportunities for law students. However, little research had been done to measure the educational benefits for those law students. We designed the study that is featured in the article to assess those goals. We conclude that Street Law provides significant and often unique benefits for law students including developing vital cultural competency skills, practi...
In this article, the authors describe the Lawyering Process Program at the William S. Boyd School of...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...
Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking...
In 1972, a small group of Georgetown University law students developed a series of practical law les...
Street Law, where law students or lawyers teach about the law in local school, correctional, and com...
Street Law is believed to be a unique learning method. But do Street Law university students actuall...
The need for public legal education is at an all-time high. From constitutional law issues raised by...
In this article, the author discusses how law schools have been challenged recently to place greater...
An interview with two veterans of Street Law teaching at US universities examining the methods and p...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
The MacCrate Report outlined ten skills that are essential for every practicing attorney and should ...
The term ‘Street Law’ authentically refers to the specially-created, experimental teaching syllabus ...
Traditionally law schools have viewed the study of law as an academic science with the development o...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
In this article, the authors describe the Lawyering Process Program at the William S. Boyd School of...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...
Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking...
In 1972, a small group of Georgetown University law students developed a series of practical law les...
Street Law, where law students or lawyers teach about the law in local school, correctional, and com...
Street Law is believed to be a unique learning method. But do Street Law university students actuall...
The need for public legal education is at an all-time high. From constitutional law issues raised by...
In this article, the author discusses how law schools have been challenged recently to place greater...
An interview with two veterans of Street Law teaching at US universities examining the methods and p...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
The MacCrate Report outlined ten skills that are essential for every practicing attorney and should ...
The term ‘Street Law’ authentically refers to the specially-created, experimental teaching syllabus ...
Traditionally law schools have viewed the study of law as an academic science with the development o...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
In this article, the authors describe the Lawyering Process Program at the William S. Boyd School of...
In this Article, we describe the creation and evaluation of a curricular intervention designed to he...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...