From the introduction: Many of us have struggled with the difficult and complex question of how best to teach our students. On one level, we ask: What are the best ways to convey information and skills to our students? How can we do it effectively in classes of fifty, eighty, one hundred, or more? On another level, we ask: What do our students need to know in order to become good lawyers? On yet a deeper level, the issue is political. Do we as women teachers make law school productive and rewarding for our women students? Do we promote nonsexist values that make it harder for the lawyers we train to dismiss the achievements of their female colleagues? Do we lead students to thoughtful questions about the larger society or are we simply one ...
The primary purpose of this study was to examine law professors\u27 opinions on selected areas of th...
This article demonstrates that there is a gender divide on law school faculties. Women work in infer...
Dissatisfaction permeates the public and professional discourse about lawyers and legal education. D...
From the introduction: Many of us have struggled with the difficult and complex question of how best...
In this Article, Ms. Bashi and Ms. Iskander report and analyze the results of a comprehensive study ...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
The Journal of Legal Education did all legal educators a great service when it published Women in L...
On March 10, 2006, the Harvard Journal of Law & Gender, cosponsoring with the Harvard Civil Rights-C...
American legal education is in the grip of what some have called an “existential crisis.” The New Yo...
A seemingly insurmountable barrier to women\u27s success in legal academia is the way they are perce...
Disproportionately few men enroll in gender-focused law school seminars. Reasons for that reluctance...
While great strides have been made by legal writing professors in the past two decades, many law sch...
Law teachers make choices over syllabus material, teaching methods and assessment formats, and thus ...
Although men and women enter law school at the same rate with similar credentials, studies demonstra...
At a meeting of the Northeast Corridor in October, 1990, Paulette Caldwell wondered aloud whether bl...
The primary purpose of this study was to examine law professors\u27 opinions on selected areas of th...
This article demonstrates that there is a gender divide on law school faculties. Women work in infer...
Dissatisfaction permeates the public and professional discourse about lawyers and legal education. D...
From the introduction: Many of us have struggled with the difficult and complex question of how best...
In this Article, Ms. Bashi and Ms. Iskander report and analyze the results of a comprehensive study ...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
The Journal of Legal Education did all legal educators a great service when it published Women in L...
On March 10, 2006, the Harvard Journal of Law & Gender, cosponsoring with the Harvard Civil Rights-C...
American legal education is in the grip of what some have called an “existential crisis.” The New Yo...
A seemingly insurmountable barrier to women\u27s success in legal academia is the way they are perce...
Disproportionately few men enroll in gender-focused law school seminars. Reasons for that reluctance...
While great strides have been made by legal writing professors in the past two decades, many law sch...
Law teachers make choices over syllabus material, teaching methods and assessment formats, and thus ...
Although men and women enter law school at the same rate with similar credentials, studies demonstra...
At a meeting of the Northeast Corridor in October, 1990, Paulette Caldwell wondered aloud whether bl...
The primary purpose of this study was to examine law professors\u27 opinions on selected areas of th...
This article demonstrates that there is a gender divide on law school faculties. Women work in infer...
Dissatisfaction permeates the public and professional discourse about lawyers and legal education. D...