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This book discusses comprehensively the use of Flipped Classrooms
in the context of legal education. The Flipped Classroom model
implies that lecture modules are delivered online to provide more
time for in-class interactivity. This book analyses the pedagogical
viability, costs and other resource-related implications, technical
aspects as well as the production and online distribution of
Flipped Classrooms. It compares the Flipped Classroom concept with
traditional law teaching methods and details its advantages and
limitations. The findings are tested by way of a case study which
serves as the basis for the development of comprehensive guidelines
for the concept's practical implementation. As Flipped Classrooms
have become a very hot topic across disciplines in recent years,
this book offers a unique resource for law teachers, law school
managers as well as researchers in the field of legal education. It
is a must-have for anyone interested in innovative law teaching
methodologies.
Written by an award-winning professor with over 25 years of
experience, this book explains comprehensively the different facets
of law teaching from the law teacher's perspective. It uniquely
covers numerous topics which have been ignored by the legal
education literature so far, but which are of immense importance
for the success of law students, law schools and-last but not
least-the day-to-day work of law teachers themselves. These topics
include the goals of law teaching, the factors that lead to
successful law teaching, special characteristics of good law
teachers, different ways of preparing for in-class success,
face-to-face versus online teaching, the in-class teaching
experience, assessments, teaching evaluations, the design of new
courses and programmes, the teacher-student and the teacher-teacher
relationship, the importance of teaching administration as well as
the future of law teaching in the digital age. The author
approaches various themes from the viewpoint of his own experience.
He tells his very personal stories of classroom success and
failure, of enthusiasm, fun and disappointments when dealing with
law students, of accomplishments and frustrations when considering
learning outcomes and of surprises when dealing with red tape. He
thus allows the readership to grasp different aspects of law
teaching in a very hands-own way and facilitates the understanding
of the underlying often rather complex human-to-human
relationships. This book should be in the bookshelf of any law
teacher. As it covers a wide spectrum of so far unexplored legal
education issues, it is also an invaluable source at the start of a
law teaching career, but also for established law teachers who wish
to reflect on their own teaching approaches. A rich body of
cross-references to the existing literature makes the book a
powerful tool for research on any aspect of legal education. Last
but not least, the author's ironic sense of himself and of the law
teacher profession makes the book a very entertaining read for
anybody who always wanted to know what law teaching really is (and
is not) about.
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