This is one of seven articles from a symposium applying to law school the Principles of Good Teaching Practices that were developed for undergraduate educators. The article presents a good overview of the general issues that impact diverse students such as the institutional climate, admission and selection criteria, academic policies, student support program, curriculum, and law school pedagogy. It provides some concrete suggestions on how law schools can enhance learning. It is a good primer for ASP professionals because it points out the various factors that can hinder students\u27 learning or academic performance
Two recent influential books on legal education, Educating Lawyers and Best Practices for Legal Educ...
This Article will detail a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiri...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...
This is one of seven articles from a symposium applying to law school the Principles of Good Teachin...
Professor Lustbader discusses how applying the seven principles to legal education can be done witho...
Time plus energy equals learning. Efficient time-management skills are critical for students and pro...
In these few, short paragraphs, we have attempted to provide brief ideas for ways that law schools c...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
This article synthesizes some of the main points of the symposium contributors. They covered a wide ...
There was a consensus at the first panel discussion on how law schools are addressing major changes ...
This session will describe seven principles of learning, distilled from research in cognitive, devel...
There are many difficulties in teaching the law. These problems are often referred to generically as...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
There is resounding consensus that diversity in legal education is a priority. Yet, North American l...
Apathetic students, illiterate graduates, incompetent teaching, impersonal campuses-- so rolls the d...
Two recent influential books on legal education, Educating Lawyers and Best Practices for Legal Educ...
This Article will detail a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiri...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...
This is one of seven articles from a symposium applying to law school the Principles of Good Teachin...
Professor Lustbader discusses how applying the seven principles to legal education can be done witho...
Time plus energy equals learning. Efficient time-management skills are critical for students and pro...
In these few, short paragraphs, we have attempted to provide brief ideas for ways that law schools c...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
This article synthesizes some of the main points of the symposium contributors. They covered a wide ...
There was a consensus at the first panel discussion on how law schools are addressing major changes ...
This session will describe seven principles of learning, distilled from research in cognitive, devel...
There are many difficulties in teaching the law. These problems are often referred to generically as...
Law schools have compelling reasons to begin thoroughly reviewing their skills curriculum. Three new...
There is resounding consensus that diversity in legal education is a priority. Yet, North American l...
Apathetic students, illiterate graduates, incompetent teaching, impersonal campuses-- so rolls the d...
Two recent influential books on legal education, Educating Lawyers and Best Practices for Legal Educ...
This Article will detail a process that law schools can use to comply with the ABA Standards requiri...
This book provides a vision of what legal education might become if legal educators step back and co...