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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law Librarianship
Organized For Service: The Hicks Classification System And The Evolution Of Law School Curriculum, John L. Moreland
Organized For Service: The Hicks Classification System And The Evolution Of Law School Curriculum, John L. Moreland
Articles by Maurer Faculty
This article traces the origins and development of the Hicks Classification System, an in-house organizational scheme used by the Yale Law Library from the late 1930s to the 1990s. It explores the relationship between the Hicks Classification System and the changing pedagogical methods of the law school curriculum during the early part of the 20th century. It provides a brief biographical sketch of Frederick C. Hicks, creator of the scheme, the need for a legal classification system, a detailed analysis of Hicks’s scheme, its finding aids, and a discussion of the inherent cultural biases in the system.
Student Services Town Hall: Inspiration From A Distance, Kimberly Mattioli, Geraldine Kalim, Edna Lewis
Student Services Town Hall: Inspiration From A Distance, Kimberly Mattioli, Geraldine Kalim, Edna Lewis
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Drawing on inspiration and the creativity of others has long been a hallmark of the Student Services Librarian. Never before, however, have we needed each other quite as much as we have during this wild ride of an academic year. Motivated both by a desire to bring us all together and out of our own need to find inspiration, the three of us hatched a plan to host a Student Services Town Hall.
We purposely scheduled the event far enough into the semester that some of us could report on successful (and not-so-successful) attempts to continue Student Services work during …
Program Review: Empowering Foreign Llm Students To Learn And Thrive, Maggie Kiel-Morse
Program Review: Empowering Foreign Llm Students To Learn And Thrive, Maggie Kiel-Morse
Articles by Maurer Faculty
A review of the program, “Empowering Foreign LLM Students to Learn and Thrive,” presented by Jennifer Allison, in the RIPS-SIS Instructional Design for Law Librarians Workshop, July 28-30, 2020.
Touring The Lilly Library, Kimberly Mattioli
Touring The Lilly Library, Kimberly Mattioli
Articles by Maurer Faculty
When I began my job in January 2015, I was the first person to be officially designated as the Student Services Librarian at Indiana University Maurer School of Law’s Jerome Hall Law Library. One could argue that almost all the functions of a librarian at an academic law library are indeed “student services,” but I was given the exciting, and at times overwhelming, task of making the students happy on a full-time basis.
What makes students happy? Does anything (short of free food) make law students excited about the law library? I took it as a personal challenge to find …
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Keeping Up With New Legal Titles, Susan David Demaine, Susan Azyndar
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Access To The Justices’ Papers: A Better Balance, Susan David Demaine
Access To The Justices’ Papers: A Better Balance, Susan David Demaine
Articles by Maurer Faculty
This article explores the history of Supreme Court Justices’ papers and their status as private property. It discusses questions of access, the public’s interest in understanding the Court and its decisions, and the effect of the Justices’ papers on scholarship and popular research. Several options for encouraging greater openness are proposed.
Reaching And Teaching Millennials: Designing The Future Of Student Services, Kimberly Mattioli, Brian Detweiler, Mike Martinez Jr.
Reaching And Teaching Millennials: Designing The Future Of Student Services, Kimberly Mattioli, Brian Detweiler, Mike Martinez Jr.
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Today’s students have come to expect library services that are quite different from their predecessors and law librarians must evolve to meet their needs. As law libraries in the United States face the realities of declining enrolment and decreasing budgets, it is imperative that we find new and creative ways to build positive relationships with our students while also preparing them for the realities of practicing law in an environment driven by rapid technological change. Three law librarians from the United States, Brian Detweiler, Kimberly Mattioli, and Mike Martinez, Jr., discuss their successes and failures in reaching out to their …
Access To Justice?: A Study Of Access Restrictions On The Papers Of U.S. Supreme Court Justices, Susan David Demaine, Benjamin J. Keele
Access To Justice?: A Study Of Access Restrictions On The Papers Of U.S. Supreme Court Justices, Susan David Demaine, Benjamin J. Keele
Articles by Maurer Faculty
For scholars of law, history, and government—and the American public—the papers of all Supreme Court Justices are of vital importance. They contribute to biographies, histories, and legal critiques. Our understanding of the Court and its decisions is enriched by access to the thinking of the justices. In turn, this knowledge informs our views on our laws and social order and helps shape the future of our legal, political, and even moral culture. Despite the importance of these papers, many justices who have donated their papers in the past 75 years or so have placed restrictions on access to the collection. …
The Distractions Of Technology, Kimberly Mattioli
The Distractions Of Technology, Kimberly Mattioli
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Since the moment I became a librarian, I have had a problem with technology. It’s not that I can’t keep up with the developments or that I can’t figure out ways to incorporate technology into my work. My problem is much simpler in a way—I find technology too distracting. With my desktop, my phone, and my iPad sitting in my office, how could I not be drawn to the glowing screens and the limitless websites before me? The Internet is never-ending, and so too, it seems, is my ability to be distracted by it. With a little dedication, however, I …
Creative Assessment: Connecting Legal Research Training And Instruction To Results (Review Of Aall Program), Kimberly Mattioli
Creative Assessment: Connecting Legal Research Training And Instruction To Results (Review Of Aall Program), Kimberly Mattioli
Articles by Maurer Faculty
As academic law librarians, we should all be concerned with identifying whether our students are meeting AALL’s Principles and Standards for Legal Research Competency. I was excited to attend this session on Creative Assessment so that I could learn new ways in which librarians can evaluate their students to see if they are adequately trained in these core competencies. The panelists were Pamela Rogers Melton, Associate Director for Administration at the University of South Carolina, Gail Partin, Interim Director at the Dickinson School of Law Library, and Barbara Gabor, Senior Research and Reference Specialist at WilmerHale.
The 2014 Leadership Academy: Six Months Out - How Are Participants Using What They Learned?, Susan David Demaine
The 2014 Leadership Academy: Six Months Out - How Are Participants Using What They Learned?, Susan David Demaine
Articles by Maurer Faculty
“If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.” – John Quincy Adams
These wise words were one of many lessons that the attendees of the 2014 AALL Leadership Academy took home with them following two full days of hands-on learning this past April. Now, a little more than six months later, Spectrum catches up with a few of the Academy attendees to find out how they are using what they learned and the ways that the Academy has affected their professional (and personal) lives.
Issues Facing Academic Law Libraries - New Challenges, New Opportunities, Linda K. Fariss
Issues Facing Academic Law Libraries - New Challenges, New Opportunities, Linda K. Fariss
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Law libraries are facing new challenges, including evolving methods of legal research, and space and budget constraints. This article explores those challenges, and looks at the opportunities that accompany changes.