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Christine C. M. Lee; Anika Vear; Bethany Howard; Julia Choate – Advances in Physiology Education, 2025
Physiology graduates are well-positioned to pursue a career path in the high-demand healthcare industry, but students may lack awareness of the available opportunities. At Monash University, there has been a marked increase in student completion of the Physiology Major for the Bachelor of Science degree. Despite the projected employment growth…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Graduates, Outcomes of Education, Physiology
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Xu, Han – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2021
This study explores interpreters' role performance, lawyers' reactions to interpreters' performance, and the perceptions and expectations of the interpreter role among these two groups of professionals. It adopts an ethnographic approach to generate data from observations made in Australia of 20 authentic interpreted lawyer-client interviews and…
Descriptors: Translation, Ethics, Interviews, Lawyers
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Evans, Nina; Price, James – Information Research: An International Electronic Journal, 2017
Introduction. Data, information and knowledge together constitute a vital business asset for every organization that enables every business activity, every business process and every business decision. The global legal industry is facing unprecedented change, which inevitably creates challenges for individual law firms. These global changes affect…
Descriptors: Information Management, Lawyers, Organizations (Groups), Interviews
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Lipovsky, Caroline – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2017
A number of linguistic studies on courtroom discourse deal with witness examinations, however counsels' opening statements have been given relatively little attention. Drawing on the analysis of a Crown Prosecutor's opening statement in a murder trial held at the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, and using the Systemic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Story Telling, Court Litigation, Lawyers
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Cameron, Craig – International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning, 2018
An employment contract between the student and the host organization may be the unintended consequence of a work-integrated learning (WIL) placement. The student, as an 'inadvertent employee' of the host organization, can expose the university to risk. A case study involving thirteen Australian university lawyers identifies the legal and…
Descriptors: Risk Assessment, Lawyers, Work Experience Programs, Universities
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Burton, Kelley – Journal of Learning Design, 2017
The Australian Learning and Teaching Council's Bachelor of Laws Learning and Teaching Academic Standards Statement identified "thinking skills" as one of the six threshold learning outcomes for a Bachelor of Laws Program, which reinforced the significance of learning, teaching and assessing "thinking skills" in law schools…
Descriptors: Criterion Referenced Tests, Foreign Countries, Scoring Rubrics, Lawyers
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Ewais, Tatjana; Banks, Cate – Health Education Journal, 2018
Background: Issues of health and law are closely connected in people with chronic illness but as yet there is little emphasis in current health services funding and planning on establishing formal links between these two important areas. Context: The Mater Young Adult Health Centre and Health Advocacy Legal Clinic partnership offers an example of…
Descriptors: Laws, Chronic Illness, Young Adults, Advocacy
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Kennedy, Amanda; Mundy, Trish; Nielsen, Jennifer M. – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2016
In 2012, a team of academics from six universities worked on an OLT-funded project, "Rethinking Law Curriculum: developing strategies to prepare law graduates for practice in rural and regional Australia." The project was motivated by the declining proportion of lawyers being attracted to and remaining in practice in rural and regional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Place Based Education, Legal Education (Professions), Curriculum Development
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Collins, Pauline – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
With globalising transnational corporate law firms, high rates of depression among law students and lawyers, and a changing role for lawyers in the world of dispute resolution, academics and professional bodies have been doing some soul searching. They are pondering just what is required in a law degree to train future lawyers adequately. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Legal Education (Professions), Relevance (Education), Educational Practices
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Cameron, Craig; Freudenberg, Brett; Giddings, Jeff; Klopper, Christopher – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2018
Work-integrated learning (WIL) is a risky business in higher education. The strategic opportunities that WIL presents for universities cannot be achieved without taking on unavoidable legal risks. University lawyers are involved with managing the legal risks as part of their internal delivery of legal services to universities. It is important to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Work Experience Programs, Risk Assessment, Higher Education
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Cameron, Craig; Klopper, Christopher – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2015
Work integrated learning (WIL) is in growing demand by multiple stakeholders within the higher education sector in Australia. There are significant and distinct legal risks to universities associated with WIL programmes. University lawyers, along with WIL administrators and university management, are responsible for managing legal risk. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Lawyers, Work Experience Programs
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Douglas, Susan – e-Journal of Business Education and Scholarship of Teaching, 2015
"Thinking like a lawyer" is traditionally associated with rational-analytical problem solving and an adversarial approach to conflict. These features have been correlated with problems of psychological, or emotional, distress amongst lawyers and law students. These problems provide a strong argument for incorporating a consideration of…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Legal Education (Professions), Lawyers, Problem Solving
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Liu, Xin; Hale, Sandra – Interpreter and Translator Trainer, 2018
Courtroom interpreting requires a high level of accuracy due to the strategic use of language in such an institutional setting. It is generally agreed among interpreting scholars that quality interpreting in court should accurately relay both propositional content and illocutionary force of the original utterances. This high standard of accuracy…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Court Litigation, Translation, Accuracy
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Cavanagh, Jillian Maria – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2012
This study is about female auxiliary workers in the Australian legal sector. The purpose is to explore the impact of subjectivities on women workers and how they negotiate their positionality to participate in meaningful work and learning. The study is grounded in theories of identity and socio-cultural perspectives of subjectivity, agentic action…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employed Women, Self Concept, Ethnography
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James, Colin; Bore, Miles; Zito, Susanna – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2012
Research studies have reported elevated rates of psychological distress (e.g., depression) in practicing lawyers yet little research has examined predictors of such problems in law students. Specific personality traits have been shown to be predictors of a range of psychological problems. We administered a battery of tests to a cohort of 1st-year…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Well Being, Lawyers, Emotional Intelligence
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