Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- New York Law School (36)
- Legal education (28)
- Rooftops Project (25)
- Law school (16)
- Education (15)
-
- Hagy (11)
- Roger J Miner (11)
- Lawyering (10)
- Pedagogy (10)
- Law School (9)
- Clinic (8)
- Advocacy (7)
- Law review (7)
- Legal profession (7)
- Legal scholarship (6)
- Mental disability law (6)
- Scholarship (6)
- Skills (6)
- Law schools (5)
- Lawyers (5)
- Legal (5)
- Legal writing (5)
- Rooftops (5)
- Student (5)
- Students (5)
- Therapeutic jurisprudence (5)
- Experiential (4)
- Jurisprudence (4)
- 1L (3)
- American Bar Association (3)
- Publication Year
- Publication
-
- Articles & Chapters (84)
- NYLS Law Review (50)
- Rooftops Project (42)
- Student Newspapers (25)
- Other Publications (12)
-
- Books (3)
- New York Law School Events and Publications (3)
- Lawyers and the Legal Profession (2)
- Alumni Rosters and Directories (1)
- Bar Associations (1)
- Commencement Addresses (1)
- Law Practice (1)
- Law Review Addresses (1)
- Legal Education (1)
- NYLS Journal of International and Comparative Law (1)
- New York Law School In Brief (1)
- News Articles (1)
- Student Yearbooks (1)
- Wilf Impact Center for Public Interest Law (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 232
Full-Text Articles in Law
Law Professors’ Conceptualization And Use Of Students’ Prior Knowledge And Experience In Developing Subject-Matter Understanding, Matthew Gewolb
Law Professors’ Conceptualization And Use Of Students’ Prior Knowledge And Experience In Developing Subject-Matter Understanding, Matthew Gewolb
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Legal Reasoning Case Files, 2nd Ed. (2023), Kris Franklin
Legal Reasoning Case Files, 2nd Ed. (2023), Kris Franklin
Books
This text provides real-world case files designed to reinforce foundational legal reasoning skills. Students work through practical problems, each of which is set in the context of a different basic law school subject. Commentary throughout the text guides students toward more sophisticated comprehension of the factual and legal materials, and more nuanced legal analysis, all while introducing common forms of practice-based writing.
Each chapter then takes the rules introduced in the case file and illustrates ways they might be applied to an essay examination question and multiple-choice question. Additional practice questions and suggestions for classroom exercises are included in the …
The Rise And Fall Of Jews At Law Schools, Rebecca Roiphe
The Rise And Fall Of Jews At Law Schools, Rebecca Roiphe
Other Publications
No abstract provided.
The Exclusion Of Public Legal Education From Mandatory And Aspirational State Pro Bono Service Requirements, Amy Wallace
The Exclusion Of Public Legal Education From Mandatory And Aspirational State Pro Bono Service Requirements, Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
Pro bono service is embedded in legal education and practice. Every year, lawyers and law students across the United States engage in countless hours of pro bono service. There are over 1.3 million lawyers in the country and more than one hundred thousand law students enrolled in law school. Lawyers perform an average of thirty-seven hours of pro bono work each year. They reference several factors that motivate them to perform this work but the desire to help people in need ranks highest. Professional duty is also listed as an important factor for lawyers choosing to perform pro bono work. …
Lawyering 'Twisties': Naming And Untangling Performance Anxiety, Heidi K. Brown
Lawyering 'Twisties': Naming And Untangling Performance Anxiety, Heidi K. Brown
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
A Tribute To The Scholarship Of Professor Dale Oesterle, Jeffrey J. Haas
A Tribute To The Scholarship Of Professor Dale Oesterle, Jeffrey J. Haas
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Directed Questions: A Non-Socratic Dialogue About Non-Socratic Teaching, Kris Franklin, Rory Bahadur
Directed Questions: A Non-Socratic Dialogue About Non-Socratic Teaching, Kris Franklin, Rory Bahadur
Articles & Chapters
Despite frequent criticism of Socratic and case-method teaching, the core teaching in most foundational law classes has been remarkably stagnant. But in a time of turmoil and reexamination of the traditions we have all inherited, there is also opportunity for meaningful adaptation to the modern era. This Article introduces Directed Questions methodology as an alternative to the traditional teaching models currently operating in most law schools. Directed reading pedagogy allows legal educators to seamlessly transition to a modern and effective pedagogy incorporating best practices which recognizes that fostering inclusion and the success of diverse students is mandatory in post-Langdellian legal …
Caring For The Souls Of Our Students: The Evolution Of A Community Economic Development Clinic During Turbulent Times, Gowri Krishna, Kelly Pfeifer, Dana Thompson
Caring For The Souls Of Our Students: The Evolution Of A Community Economic Development Clinic During Turbulent Times, Gowri Krishna, Kelly Pfeifer, Dana Thompson
Articles & Chapters
Community Economic Development (CED) clinicians regularly address issues surrounding economic, racial, and social justice, as those are the core principles motivating their work to promote vibrant, diverse, and sustainable communities. When COVID-19 arrived, and heightened attention to police brutality and racial injustice ensued, CED clinicians focused not only on how to begin to address these issues in their clinics, but on how to discuss these issues more deeply and effectively with their students. This essay highlights the ways in which the pandemic school year influenced significant rethinking of one CED clinic’s operations: first, the pandemic sharpened the clinic’s mission to …
Book Review: Public Legal Education - The Role Of Law Schools In Building A More Legally Literate Society (Routledge 2021), Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Healthy Hives: Can Replacing Hierarchies With Intergroup Teams Transform Our Profession?, Heidi K. Brown
Healthy Hives: Can Replacing Hierarchies With Intergroup Teams Transform Our Profession?, Heidi K. Brown
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
How To Train Your Supervisor, Kris Franklin, Paula J. Manning
How To Train Your Supervisor, Kris Franklin, Paula J. Manning
Articles & Chapters
In an ideal world every meeting between law students and professors, or between beginning lawyers and their supervisors, would leave supervisors impressed by their charges and junior lawyers/students with a clear sense of direction for their work. But we do not live in that ideal world. Instead, supervisors, supervisees, law professors and law students frequently leave such meetings feeling frustrated, disconnected and without a shared understanding of how to improve the experience (and future performance).
This Article seeks to improve supervisory meetings, and to do so from the perspective of the ones under supervision. There is a genuine art to …
Cyberspace Back To The Classroom: Taking Lessons Learned From Teaching Street Law During The Pandemic Back To In-Person Instruction, Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
In spring 2020, when schools around the world were compelled to close their physical doors, educators, administrators and students were forced to re-invent what it meant to teach and to learn. For fifty years, Street Law programs have been dedicated to hands-on, student centered, interactive teaching strategies. Law students, lawyers and teachers have devoted countless hours to creating fun, practical lessons designed to teach young people about practical law that affects their daily lives and also develop the skills they need to use their newly found legal knowledge to improve their lives and their communities. Remote learning upended all the …
Creativity, Content, And Community In Evidence Online, Lynn Su
Creativity, Content, And Community In Evidence Online, Lynn Su
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Understanding And Lifting Up Our Quiet Students: Reimagining "Participation" In The Remote Classroom, Heidi K. Brown
Understanding And Lifting Up Our Quiet Students: Reimagining "Participation" In The Remote Classroom, Heidi K. Brown
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Preparing Lawyers For Practice: Developing Cultural Competency, Communication Skills, And Content Knowledge Through Street Law Programs, Ben Perdue, Amy Wallace
Preparing Lawyers For Practice: Developing Cultural Competency, Communication Skills, And Content Knowledge Through Street Law Programs, Ben Perdue, Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
Street Law is a legal education methodology designed to increase civic engagement, critical thinking skills, and develop practical legal knowledge in non-lawyers. Law students at Georgetown began using Street Law methods to teach high school classes in the 1970s. While Street Law was designed to help high school students, the programs were also crafted to provide authentic experiential opportunities for law students. However, little research had been done to measure the educational benefits for those law students. We designed the study that is featured in the article to assess those goals. We conclude that Street Law provides significant and often …
Learning To Heal: Integrating Restorative Justice Into Legal Education, Natasha S. Vedananda
Learning To Heal: Integrating Restorative Justice Into Legal Education, Natasha S. Vedananda
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Classroom To Cyberspace: Preserving Street Law's Interactive And Student-Centered Focus During Distance Learning, Amy Wallace
Classroom To Cyberspace: Preserving Street Law's Interactive And Student-Centered Focus During Distance Learning, Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
The Street Law program at New York Law School (NYLS) is a faculty taught, credit-bearing course that trains law students to teach interactive lessons covering practical legal topics at The Charter High School for Law & Social Justice (CHSLSJ), in the Bronx, New York.
On March 3, 2020, NYLS moved online due to the rapid rise of COVID cases in New York City. Like many clinical and experiential programs, we weighed options that would provide both valuable experiences for our high school and law students while keeping everyone safe.
On Sunday March 15, 2020, the New York City public schools …
A Law-Themed Charter High School Born At New York Law School Remains Indelibly Linked, Amy Wallace
A Law-Themed Charter High School Born At New York Law School Remains Indelibly Linked, Amy Wallace
Articles & Chapters
It was a confluence of unrelated events at New York Law School in the spring of 2009 that led to the founding of the Charter High School for Law and Social Justice (CHSLSJ) in the Bronx, New York. Dedicated law school faculty members were crucial to the school’s launch and the law school, its law students and faculty continue to nurture this unique and reciprocal relationship. Professor Richard Marsico was the unstoppable force behind the founding of the charter school and its close connection to New York Law School (NYLS). This article details the origins of CHSLSJ, the current relationship …
The Makings Of A Culturally Savvy Lawyer: Novel Approaches For Teaching And Assessing Cross-Cultural Skills In Law School, Shahrokh Falati
The Makings Of A Culturally Savvy Lawyer: Novel Approaches For Teaching And Assessing Cross-Cultural Skills In Law School, Shahrokh Falati
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Get With The Pronoun, Heidi K. Brown
Face Fear—Don’T Fake It, Heidi K. Brown
We Carry Each Other, Heidi K. Brown
Training Powerful Legal Communicators: What Does The Future Hold, Nicholas W. Allard, Heidi K. Brown
Training Powerful Legal Communicators: What Does The Future Hold, Nicholas W. Allard, Heidi K. Brown
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
Talented But Overlooked, Heidi K. Brown
Talented But Overlooked, Heidi K. Brown
Articles & Chapters
We should transform hiring and mentoring of introverted lawyers.
Inclusive Legal Writing, Heidi K. Brown
Reflections On Identifying And Mapping Learning Competencies And Outcomes: What Do We Want Law Students To Learn?, Margaret Martin Barry
Reflections On Identifying And Mapping Learning Competencies And Outcomes: What Do We Want Law Students To Learn?, Margaret Martin Barry
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Bridging The Divide Between Assessment And Accreditation, Docia L. Rudley
Bridging The Divide Between Assessment And Accreditation, Docia L. Rudley
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Assessing Law Students As Reflective Practitioners, Jodi S. Balsam, Susan L. Brooks, Margaret Reuter
Assessing Law Students As Reflective Practitioners, Jodi S. Balsam, Susan L. Brooks, Margaret Reuter
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Assessment Of Professional Values In Experiential Education In Law: Becoming Who We Are Through Practice, John Erbes, Rebecca J. O'Neill
Assessment Of Professional Values In Experiential Education In Law: Becoming Who We Are Through Practice, John Erbes, Rebecca J. O'Neill
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Legal Education And The Civil Law System, Rodrigo Sadi
Legal Education And The Civil Law System, Rodrigo Sadi
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.