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Michael Conklin – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2025
This teaching note presents an active learning exercise using a clip from the television show "The Office." The exercise centers on a promise to pay for the college education of a group of third graders, raising questions about capacity, consideration, offer, acceptance, statute of frauds, revocations, promissory estoppel, and other key…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Television, Contracts, Business Education
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Richard G. Kunkel – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2024
For many professors, testing is primarily a tool for assessing the learning of students. However, research into the "testing effect" has established the value of testing also as a learning tool, not just as an assessment tool. This article provides an overview of this research and also of my own experiences in using a variety of testing…
Descriptors: Testing, Test Construction, College Students, Student Evaluation
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Patricia M. Sheridan; Marc Waldman – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2024
Today's college students increasingly rely on technology in their daily activities, and a basic awareness of data privacy is becoming essential from both a personal and professional standpoint. This article describes the design of an interdisciplinary undergraduate course focused on data privacy law. It outlines the key content areas that…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Data, Privacy, Information Security
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Watkins, Dawn – Human Rights Education Review, 2022
The research underpinning this article has taken place in the context of a research project that seeks to improve children's legal capability. Discussions concerning the place of children's rights in this project led the author to engage with the HRE literature, where they discovered an affinity between the aims of the project and so-called…
Descriptors: Laws, Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Childrens Rights
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Sweet, Julie Anne – History Teacher, 2021
The fifth of March 2020 was the 250th anniversary of an event commonly known as the "Boston Massacre," and to commemorate it, the author's upper-level history class staged an unscripted presentation of the resulting historical trial in conjunction with third-year law students enrolled in Practice Court through the Baylor Law School.…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Capstone Experiences, Violence
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Scott Gelber – Review of Higher Education, 2024
Scholars have analyzed debates about controversial faculty speech inside and outside of the classroom, but none have paid close attention to the facet of academic freedom related to professors' decisions about daily teaching methods. This omission, along with obstacles to enacting pedagogical norms, has caused the scholarly community to overlook…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Academic Freedom, Teaching Methods, Professional Autonomy
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Nilon, Robin – InSight: A Journal of Scholarly Teaching, 2020
In this article, I show how the study of the poems of Charles Reznikoff -- a 20th century American lawyer -- helps teach the critical art of paraphrase to International law students, lawyers from The Temple's LLM Program. Scholars have acknowledged the difficulty of teaching paraphrase to students from civil law countries, acknowledging that it…
Descriptors: Poetry, Lawyers, International Law, Teaching Methods
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Pretorius, Jannie – Teaching Artist Journal, 2018
In this essay, the author explores what educationalists can learn from studying "The Paper Chase." The rise and decline of the Socratic method and the importance of the hidden curriculum are highlighted.
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Films
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Roddy, Juliette – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
The theories and practices of economics are important in teaching students and practitioners in the fields of criminal justice, health, and public policy. Criminal justice and health professionals face increased scrutiny due to cost growth and inequities. Practitioners and policymakers can be challenged in their understanding of quantifiable…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Teaching Methods, Law Enforcement, Public Policy
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Manley, Stewart – English in Education, 2018
Since 2012, I have been using home-made poetry to supplement my teaching of trust law. My experience illustrates how English -- in this case poetry -- can enhance teaching in other fields. Poetry can capture complex concepts in understandable and memorable ways, provide the human context behind abstract principles and increase authenticity in the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Laws, Legal Education (Professions)
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Rubin, Edward L. – Social Education, 2022
Modern people work in massive factories or offices for remotely managed corporations and need protection in their capacity as employees. Instead of locally made or distributed products, they buy mass market goods manufactured hundreds or thousands of miles away and need protection in their capacity as consumers. And as industrial production…
Descriptors: Manufacturing, Pollution, Public Agencies, Federal Government
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Byun, K. J.; Croucher, John S. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2018
Class examples for a standard introductory statistics course usually involve a variety of applications. In this paper, we consider the teaching of statistics using forensic science and the law, an area that holds some fascination with many audiences.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Statistics, Crime, Laws
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Moore, James – Social Studies, 2022
Freedom of expression is the core political ideal undergirding American democracy and recent attacks on freedom of speech are a direct threat to the liberties and rights guaranteed in the United States Constitution. Freedom of expression is essential for participatory democracy, scientific progress, individualism, and civic education in K-12…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Constitutional Law, Social Studies, Citizenship Education
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Blackstone, Bethany; Oldmixon, Elizabeth – Journal of Political Science Education, 2020
The use of active learning pedagogies gives students a more applied experience and aids in the retention of material, improvement of critical thinking, and overall student satisfaction. Among these pedagogies, long-form (complex, extended) simulations provide an excellent vehicle for teaching students about the legislative process. However, these…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Legislation, Teaching Methods, Computer Simulation
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Theeke, Matt; Hall, Matthew I. – Journal of Management Education, 2022
In this essay, we draw on insights from U.S. legal education's century-long experiment using student-edited journals as a cocurricular learning tool, to develop the argument that management education should consider introducing a new category of student-edited, practitioner-oriented journals. Student-edited journals are potentially well-suited for…
Descriptors: Student Publications, Periodicals, Administrator Education, Extracurricular Activities
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