130 likes | 237 Views
Reflections on the putative and actual advantages of short term international mobility programmes for Law students. Cherry James, London South Bank University. The Context. Assumption: that a period of study abroad is a ‘good thing’ for students and society alike
E N D
Reflections on the putative and actual advantages of short term international mobility programmes for Law students Cherry James, London South Bank University
The Context • Assumption: that a period of study abroad is a ‘good thing’ for students and society alike • Jan Figel: European Commissioner for Education, Training, Culture and Youth: 'Erasmus programmes have given 'Europe' real meaning in hundreds of thousands of families for whom it would otherwise have remained a vague and abstract concept'. • Much smaller proportion of UK students have a period of study abroad than do other European students - a pity! • Good for CV: valued by employers; students report positively of experience
The Law degree in England and Wales • Strictures of QLD • Little room for optional modules • Often students doing at least one compulsory core module for most or all of degree course
The Problem • For Law students on QLD hard to fit an Erasmus year or semester abroad into a three year QLD • Pay fees to home institution whilst abroad - costly to add a year, about to become more so
A Possible Solution • An Erasmus Intensive Programme - about 250 a year • Alternative to studying at a university in a different EU Member State for a period of three to twelve months • Funded by EU Lifelong Learning Programme • Staff and students from at least three universities from at least three EU MSs • Joint study of particular specialised topic • Short period (ten days to six weeks) - can fit into a university holiday
Our Intensive Programme • LSBU and four other universities • Inholland University of Applied Sciences, Rotterdam, co-ordinating role • Other partners: University of Ulster; University of Pècs, Hungary; Cergy Pontoise University, France • Application for funding for a three year IP
Subject matter of IP • Requirements: integrated into the study programme of the participating students • Commission preference for IPs in rapidly evolving and new areas • Also if IP is in a study area where extended period of study abroad not possible
Subject choice: EU Criminal and Migration Law • Coming into force of Treaty of Lisbon was imminent: hence very topical. Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: Title V ToL • Recognised as area ripe for academic focus: many conferences etc • Not generally addressed in standard EU law courses, anticipated this might change • Six specialist topic areas: Terrorism, Organised Crime, State surveillance, Asylum and immigration, Free movement of persons, Citizenship: one student from each university to each topic
EU Commission requirements/aims • Multinational teaching of specialist topics which otherwise not taught much at all • Students and teachers working together in multinational groups, gaining new perspectives on topic • Teaching staff to exchange views on teaching content and new pedagogical approaches and test teaching methods in international classroom
Assessment pattern – pre-IP • Variety of innovative assessments • Pre-IP phase at home universities: • Two papers: • 1. Group paper on implementation of AFSJ law and policy in university’s Member State • 2. Individual paper on an issue within student’s specialist topic area. • All uploaded onto IP VLE
Assessment pattern – IP phase • Oral presentations on national group papers and individual papers • Moot court in national groups • Group paper prepared in international specialist topic groups, on problem scenario • Oral presentation of group paper findings • Classes during IP: specialist lectures, lectures on national legal and court systems, visits, group paper coaching
Assessment in context of IP aims • Diverse – individual and group work both national and international • Mooting • Oral presentations • Learning about AFSJ law and policy and its implementation and operation in different MSs • Erasmus IP aims: ‘...enable students and teachers to work together in multinational groups...and gain new perspectives on the topic being studied’.
Effects of participation in IP • Hard to distinguish cause from effect, but – • Some former participants have gone on to longer Erasmus exchanges (semester or year) • Some have gone on to Master’s degrees in international topics at home or abroad • All have said it was very worthwhile, some the ‘most worthwhile’ thing they have done during their degrees • Element of self selection by those with ‘international’ backgrounds/interests • For staff: expect the unexpected!