Design in Legal Education

Design in Legal Education

Author: Emily Allbon

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2022-07-07

Total Pages: 255

ISBN-13: 0429664613

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This visually rich, experience-led collection explores what design can do for legal education. In recent decades design has increasingly come to be understood as a resource to improve other fields of public, private and civil society practice; and legal design—that is, the application of design-based methods to legal practice—is increasingly embedded in lawyering across the world. It brings together experts from multiple disciplines, professions and jurisdictions to reflect upon how designerly mindsets, processes and strategies can enhance teaching and learning across higher education, public legal information and legal practice; and will be of interest and use to those teaching and learning in any and all of those fields.


Legal Design

Legal Design

Author: Corrales Compagnucci, Marcelo

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing

Published: 2021-10-21

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 183910726X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This innovative book proposes new theories on how the legal system can be made more comprehensible, usable and empowering for people through the use of design principles. Utilising key case studies and providing real-world examples of legal innovation, the book moves beyond discussion to action. It offers a rich set of examples, demonstrating how various design methods, including information, service, product and policy design, can be leveraged within research and practice.


Teaching Law by Design

Teaching Law by Design

Author: Michael Hunter Schwartz

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781611637014

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Professors Michael Hunter Schwartz, Sophie Sparrow, and Gerry Hess, leaders in legal education, have collaborated to offer a second edition of their book. Applying the research on teaching and learning, this book guides new and experienced law teachers through the process of designing and teaching a course. The book addresses how to plan a course, design a syllabus, plan individual class sessions, engage and motivate students, use a variety of teaching techniques, assess student learning, and how to be a life-long learner as a teacher. New chapters focus on creating lasting learning, experiential learning, and troubleshooting common teaching challenges.


Teaching Law by Design for Adjuncts

Teaching Law by Design for Adjuncts

Author: Sophie Sparrow

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781611637021

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book provides concrete suggestions for adjunct professors about how to design and conduct all aspects of teaching law students, based on the enormous body of research on teaching and learning to legal education. New and experienced adjuncts can apply the book's principles from sequencing a course to grading an exam. Updated and revised chapters provide a legal education-focused overview of the research on teaching and learning, students' perspective on law teaching and learning, course design, class design, student motivation, teaching methods, assessment, and professional development as teachers. New chapters focus on experiential learning, lasting learning, and troubleshooting.


The Legal Design Book

The Legal Design Book

Author: Meera Klemola

Publisher: Meera Klemola and Astrid Kohlmeier

Published: 2021-07-23

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13: 9789529447251

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The go-to guide for on legal design for practitioners seeking to innovate and create exceptional user experiences, products and services for legal business and society.


Legal Drafting by Design

Legal Drafting by Design

Author: Richard K. Neumann Jr.

Publisher: Aspen Publishing

Published: 2018-02-20

Total Pages: 689

ISBN-13: 1454897775

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Designed for upper-level survey legal drafting courses, this groundbreaking text explains drafting using a common vocabulary that applies to any legal document based on a fundamental rule structure, including statutes and other forms of public drafting as well as contracts and other forms of private drafting. This unified drafting approach gives students a common denominator approach to drafting all kinds of legal documents. In addition, students can use the techniques they’ve learned to deconstruct, interpret, and revise any kind of legal document composed of rules. This common-sense approach of teaching/learning a single vocabulary and set of skills to use in drafting any rules-based legal document is an innovative model for U.S. legal drafting courses, though it has been used in other countries for decades. Key Features: A unified approach that teaches students the general skills of drafting rules of law—duties, discretionary authority, and declarations, including their conditions in legal tests. Practice applying those skills to drafting a range of documents, including contracts, statutes, regulations, and other. Coverage of how courts interpret the rules and how to draft anticipating what the courts will do. An understanding of how law governs human behavior through the rules that students learn to draft. A wide range of classroom exercises on the detail of drafting. Additional drafting assignments, for use in and out of class, that help students learn how to use the rules and to accomplish clients’ goals.


Modernising Legal Education

Modernising Legal Education

Author: Catrina Denvir

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2022-06-23

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781108468879

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Over the last decade, cost pressures, technology, automation, globalisation, de-regulation, and changing client relationships have transformed the practice of law, but legal education has been slow to respond. Deciding what learning objectives a law degree ought to prioritise, and how to best strike the balance between vocational and academic training, are questions of growing importance for students, regulators, educators, and the legal profession. This collection provides a range of perspectives on the suite of skills required by the future lawyer and the various approaches to supporting their acquisition. Contributions report on a variety of curriculum initiatives, including role-play, gamification, virtual reality, project-based learning, design thinking, data analytics, clinical legal education, apprenticeships, experiential learning and regulatory reform, and in doing so, offer a vision of what modern legal education might look like.


Teaching Law by Design for Adjuncts

Teaching Law by Design for Adjuncts

Author: Sophie Sparrow

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Professors Sophie Sparrow, Gerry Hess, and Michael Hunter Schwartz, three leaders in the teaching and learning movement in legal education, have collaborated to offer a new book designed to synthesize the latest research on teaching and learning for adjunct law professors. The book begins with basic principles of teaching and learning theory, provides insights into how law students experience traditional law teaching, and then guides law teachers through the entire process of teaching a course. The topics addressed include: how to plan a course; how to design a syllabus and select a text; how to plan individual class sessions; how to engage and motivate students, even those tough-to-crack second- and third-year students; how to use a wide variety of teaching techniques; how to evaluate student learning, both for the purposes of assigning grades and of improving student learning; and how to be a lifelong learner as a teacher.


Australian Clinical Legal Education

Australian Clinical Legal Education

Author: Adrian Evans

Publisher: ANU Press

Published: 2017-02-17

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1760461040

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Clinical legal education (CLE) is potentially the major disruptor of traditional law schools’ core functions. Good CLE challenges many central clichés of conventional learning in law—everything from case book method to the 50-minute lecture. And it can challenge a contemporary overemphasis on screen-based learning, particularly when those screens only provide information and require no interaction. Australian Clinical Legal Education comes out of a thorough research program and offers the essential guidebook for anyone seeking to design and redesign accountable legal education; that is, education that does not just transform the learner, but also inculcates in future lawyers a compassion for and service of those whom the law ought to serve. Established law teachers will come to grips with the power of clinical method. Law students struggling with overly dry conceptual content will experience the connections between skills, the law and real life. Regulators will look again at law curricula and ask law deans ‘when’?