If you are interested in legal education, you should add Renaissance Report: A Journal of Eucation in Transition to your list of resources. Their website describes the Renaissance Report as follows:
Law school education is in transition and tools are available for changing the legal education system to better prepare students for the practice of law.
The Legal Education Renaissance Report is an online Journal of Legal Education in Transition. It is a broad based, up-to-date resource of innovations in curriculum and teaching methods in law schools and K-12, college prep, undergraduate education, online learning, technology, and business training that can be applied to legal education.
The Editors are also interested in “your comments and education innovations”.
It has a separate category for law-school education posts.
posted by Gary Rosin
Part 5 the Legal Education at the Crossroads conference
Thursday, September 24th, 2009The Big News from the Conference on Assessment: Steve Bahls, Chair of the Student Learning Outcomes Subcommittee of the American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admission to the Bar’s Standards Review Committee, presented the draft of the new Standards on assessment. From his presentation, it sounds as if some form of these Standards will be recommended by the ABA.
Where do the new Standards take us? First, the ABA, fortunately in my view, is not taking an extreme position. The proposed Standards would require that all schools do some assessment of certain required competencies, such as “legal analysis and reasoning, legal research, problem solving, written and oral communication in a legal context.” Beyond that, each school is required to identify additional learning outcomes based upon its own mission. So, the ABA appears to be seeking to preserve a good degree of law school autonomy.
The real sea change comes, however, from the requirement that each school must “employ a variety of valid and reliable measures systematically and sequentially throughout the course of the students’ studies.” Thus, a school simply will not be able to use a single summative final examination in the future, at least not in all its courses. This is no doubt a good thing, but it will involve a huge change in how we teach.
Jeff Rensberger
Posted in ABA, Assessment, Commentary, Conferences, Law Professors, Law Schools, Rankings, Student Learning, Teaching | 3 Comments »