Legal education in the digital age
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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FACULTY OF LAW LIBRARY | KL142.47 .L43 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0028667 |
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KL96.1 .P36 1992 LEGAL PRACTICE HANDBOOK MANAGING THE LAW FIRM | KL96.5 .O44 2002 ESSENTIAL PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT LEGAL ACCOUNTING | KL102 .P33 2011 Decolonising international law : development, economic growth, and the politics of universality / | KL142.47 .L43 2012 Legal education in the digital age | KL155 .B37 2006 Foundations of legal research and writing / Carol M. Bast, Margie Hawkins | KL155.G1 .J32 1990 Fundamentals of legal research / | KL155 .S44 2006 Basic legal research : tools and strategies / |
Machine generated contents note: Part I. Creating Digital Teaching Materials: 1. The digital path of the law Ronald K. L. Collins and David M. Skover; 2. Open source and the reinvention of legal education Matthew T. Bodie; 3. Copyright and innovation in legal course materials R. Anthony Reese; Part II. Teaching with Digital Course Materials: 4. Digital evolution in law school course books: trade-offs, opportunities and vigilance Lawrence A. Cunningham; 5. Smarter law school casebooks John Palfrey; 6. Law games: the importance of virtual worlds and video games for the future of legal education Gregory Silverman; 7. Law students and the new law library: an old paradigm Penny Hazelton; Part III. Reforming the Curriculum through Digital Course Materials: 8. Law school 2.0: course books in the digital age David Vladeck; 9. The new course book and the new law school curriculum Edward Rubin; 10. Casebooks, learning theory and the need to manage uncertainty Peggy Cooper Davis.
"During the coming decades, the digital revolution that has transformed so much of our world will transform legal education as well. The digital production and distribution of course materials will powerfully affect both the content and the way materials are used in the classroom and library. This collection of essays by leading legal scholars in various fields explores three aspects of this coming transformation. The first set of essays discusses the way digital materials will be created and how they will change concepts of authorship as well as methods of production and distribution. The second set explores the impact of digital materials on law school classrooms and law libraries, and the third set considers the potential transformation of the curriculum that the materials are likely to produce. Taken together, these essays provide a guide to momentous changes that every legal teacher and scholar needs to understand"--
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