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Integrating Academic Assistance Into the Casebook Classroom. Courtney G. Lee University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Jeff Minneti Stetson University College of Law. Objectives.
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Integrating Academic Assistance Into the Casebook Classroom Courtney G. Lee University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Jeff Minneti Stetson University College of Law
Objectives • Understand variables associated with integrating academic assistance into casebook courses and evaluate how the variables may play out in your program • Consider an approach to integrating academic assistance into the casebook classroom • Become familiar with formative and summative assessment strategies that measure academic skill acquisition as well as substantive understanding • Discuss methods for encouraging other faculty members to incorporate academic assistance skills into their classrooms
Variables to Consider • Course Subject • Required or elective • Bar tested or non-bar tested • Forum for Delivery of Academic Assistance • Casebook course or supplement to casebook course • Enrollment • 1L, 2L, and/or 3L • Voluntary or involuntary • Mixed ability levels or exclusively struggling students • Managing stigma • Class Size • Small or large • Instructor • Full-time vs. adjunct
Course Subjects • Required vs. Elective Courses • Enrollment Draw • Materials • Content/Coverage • Bar Subjects vs. Non-Bar Subjects • Skills Transfer • Enrollment Draw • Materials Available • Content/Coverage • Utility to Out-of-State Bar Applicants
Forum for Delivery of ASP Skills • Casebook Course vs. Supplemental Course • Integration of skills and substance in materials • Substantive coverage concerns • Course/professor credibility • Exposure to all or some students • Stigma • Perception of students not enrolled
Enrollment • First Year • Early intervention • GPA-based motivation • Possible mislabeling of “late bloomers” • Upper Level • Proximity to bar exam • Demonstrated need for assistance • Lack of motivation
Enrollment • Voluntary vs. Required • Stigma • Reaching students that need help • Unmotivated students’ affect on class • Attrition concerns • Mixed Ability Levels vs. Exclusively At-Risk • Effects on class discussion, grading curve, instruction pace/coverage, stigma • Class size
Enrollment • Managing Stigma • Messaging • Emphasize that legal education is a transformative process, not a race with winners and losers • Encourage students to set academic goals focused on best efforts and mastery of material, not specific grades • Emphasize that law school and the legal profession have room for individuals with a variety of gifts • Programming • Provide some level of academic assistance programming to all students, not just those at risk or who struggle academically • Integrating • Find ways to get involved in the law school community beyond your work with at risk and struggling students
Class Size • Large vs. Small • Diversity of viewpoints in class discussion • Effectiveness of small-group work • Ease of assessment/providing feedback • Ability to tailor instruction to students’ needs • Formal vs. informal environment • Ability of students to “hide”
Instructor • Full-time vs. Adjunct • Expertise • Institutional knowledge • Accessibility • Commitment to course • Cost
Review & Application to Your School • Course Subject • Required or elective • Bar tested or non-bar tested • Forum for Delivery of Academic Assistance • Casebook course or supplement to casebook course • Enrollment • 1L, 2L, and/or 3L • Voluntary or involuntary • Mixed ability levels or exclusively struggling students • Managing stigma • Class Size • Small or large • Instructor • Full-time vs. adjunct
Integrating ASP & the Casebook Classroom • Craft learning objectives that focus on the academic skills and substantive content you seek to develop • Sequence the objectives • Tie the academic skill objectives to casebook content objectives
Crafting & Sequencing Learning Objectives • Academic Assistance Skills • Derive rule statements from cases • Distinguish between rule statements and policy statements in cases • Synthesize rule structures from cases • Generate an outline of a legal topic • Annotate a course outline with case descriptions • Draft an effective explanation of law for an exam response • Draft an effective application of law to fact • Use cases to support legal argument • Use policy to support outcome predictions
Crafting & Sequencing Learning Objectives • Casebook Content Skills • State the three-part test for testator capacity • Explain the elements of undue influence • Apply the elements of undue influence to a fact pattern
Link Skills & Casebook Content Objectives • Derive the three-part test for testator capacity from American Red Cross v. Estate of Haynsworth • Use the courts’ opinions in Carpenter v. Carpenter, Hack v. James, RBC Ministries v. Tompkins, Carter v. Carter, and Taragian v. Watt to synthesize the rule structure for undue influence • Generate an annotated outline of undue influence in light of the courts’ opinions • Through a mock client interview, assess whether a client’s testamentary plan is the product of undue influence
Assessment Strategies Linking Skills & Casebook Content • Formative • Observations during class • Review of case briefs and outlines • Individual or small group conferences • Feedback on ungraded practice questions • Clickers or other surveys • Lawyering-skill exercises • Graded/ungraded quizzes
Assessment Strategies Linking Skills & Casebook Content • Summative • Exam • Lawyering-skill exercises • Could use in place of traditional response to practice question
Encouraging Other Faculty Members • Informal advocacy • Build relationships with casebook professors • Talk with casebook professors about assisting struggling students • Provide workshops for casebook professors • Team-teach workshop(s) with casebook professors • Formal advocacy • Make integration of skills part of strategic plan • Participate on faculty committees • Develop/revise academic policies to reflect integration of academic policies
Objectives Review • Understand variables associated with integrating academic assistance into casebook courses and evaluate how the variables may play out in their programs • Consider an approach to integrating academic assistance into the casebook classroom • Become familiar with formative and summative assessment strategies that measure academic skill acquisition as well as substantive understanding • Discuss methods for encouraging other faculty members to incorporate academic assistance skills into their classrooms