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Tushnet, Mark – Journal of Legal Education, 1986
The theoretical background of Critical Legal Studies (CLS) is examined, CLS is advocated as part of a jurisprudence course, and some possibilities for content of such a course are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Curriculum Design, Higher Education, Legal Education (Professions)
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Modjeska, Lee – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Within the limits of law and process, the lawyer's concern must be the client's cause, not his own agenda. Effective legal representation requires objectivity. The lawyer's role is to counsel legality, not morality, and the law school's responsibility is to teach law, not moral obligation. (MSE)
Descriptors: Advocacy, College Role, Curriculum Design, Ethics
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Hardy, I. Trotter – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Response to criticism of law students' legal research skills makes three observations: (1) the legal research curriculum may be adequate already; (2) the faculty reward structure favors research and works against teaching; and (3) law school administrators will not change the legal research curriculum until they feel pressure to do so. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Quality
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Imwinkelried, Edward J. – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Although statutes, not common law, have become the dominant source of law in the United States, the time and intellectual energy most law schools devote to legislation and interpretation is inadequate. Teachers of evidence courses are uniquely positioned to change this through creative instructional use of the Federal Rules of Evidence. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
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Tanford, J. Alexander – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
A course devoted to trial law and procedure would be useful in the law school curriculum. It is a meaningful contribution to law students' core education, and there are educational costs in not teaching it. Simply adding a trial law component to existing advocacy courses would not serve the purpose. (MSE)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Course Content, Court Litigation, Curriculum Design
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Gaubatz, John T. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
The Moot Court program at Case Western Reserve University is described. Moot Court as both clinical education and academic education and as a means of teaching is discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Courts, Curriculum Design, Experiential Learning
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Nathanson, Stephen – Journal of Legal Education, 1994
A law professor explains how he came to view legal problem solving as the driving concept in law school curriculum design and draws on personal experience and a survey of students concerning teaching methods in a commercial law course. He outlines six curriculum design principles for teaching legal problem solving. (MSE)
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Curriculum Design, Higher Education, Legal Education (Professions)
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Williams, Robert F. – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
State constitutional law is an emerging area for legal education, partly because of state supreme court decisions relying on state rather than federal constitutional law. Studying state constitutional law highlights similarities and diversity of legal and governmental systems. Interest in establishment of curricula and materials in state law is…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Constitutional Law, Curriculum Design, Educational Trends
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Robinson, Thomas A. – Journal of Legal Education, 1992
An estate planning course offered in one law school uses simulation to develop legal practice skills. Students take the class without background in taxes, trusts, or estates and must learn the subject area to solve a specific problem, simulating actual practice. Students prepare their own problems and critique each other's work. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Course Organization, Curriculum Design, Estate Planning