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Teaching Law and Educational Theories

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Rote memorizing and learning. Deep Approach ... logical reasoning, linear argumentation/ memorise facts and solve logical problems ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Law and Educational Theories


1
Teaching Law and Educational Theories
  • Issues, Hints and Sources for good guidance

2
Issues
  • Overview of educational theory issues
  • Course design
  • Assessment formative and summative
  • Teaching method and practice
  • Evaluation
  • Avoidance of duck-weed
  • Focus on teaching method and practice

3
Approaches to Teaching
  • Student-centred as opposed to Tutor-centred
  • Tutor-centred
  • Communication of knowledge and information
  • Focus on accumulating skills
  • Student-centred
  • Focused on analysing approaches to learning
  • Reflective as opposed to accumulating skills

4
Student Approaches to Learning
  • Surface Approach
  • External tasks that have to be completed
  • Gaining general knowledge of the subject
  • No attempt to think through relevance or
    connection between different subjects
  • Rote memorizing and learning
  • Deep Approach
  • Intrinsic interest in the task, satisfying
    curiosity and enjoyment
  • Understanding ideas and develop meaning
  • Connection to understanding in the real world
  • Strategic/Achieving Approach
  • Time management approach to a particular task
  • Focus on examination performance, or performance
    relative to others
  • Dictates particular approach taken to a
    particular task in hand
  • Alienation and Engagement
  • Surface passive alienation
  • Strategic active alienation

5
Presage, Process, Product
Student Characteristics
Students perception of context.
Students approaches to learning
Students learning outcomes
Course and Departmental Learning Context
6
Application to Law at Oxford
  • Course and Departmental Learning and Dangers of
    surface approach
  • Heavy work load
  • Examination-based
  • Large factual and technical content of law
  • Student background
  • Law A level
  • How to overcome this
  • Changing students perception of this context
  • Guidance as to reason for this structure
  • Role of tutorial
  • Formative and summative assessment

7
Tutorial Role
  • Divergence between student and tutor perceptions
    at the macro-, and meso- levels
  • Levels of analysis
  • Macro purpose of tutorials as a whole in law
  • Meso purpose of tutorials in a particular law
    subject
  • Micro aims and purpose of the particular
    tutorial
  • Divergence
  • Surface as opposed to deep approach
  • Influence of strategic approaches
  • Solution?

8
Tutorial Role SOLO taxonomy and scaffolding
9
Tutorial Role
  • Inter-disciplinary nature of law and divergence
    at the micro-level
  • Inter-disciplinary
  • Hard/pure e.g. natural sciences
  • Soft/pure e.g. history
  • Hard/applied e.g. engineering
  • Soft/applied e.g. education
  • Different Aims and Implicit student requirements
  • Hard/pure logical reasoning, linear
    argumentation/ memorise facts and solve logical
    problems
  • Soft/pure command of intellectual ideas,
    creativity and fluency/lateral thinking, wide
    reading.
  • Hard/applied problem-solving practical
    skills/applying theoretical ideas to practical
    contexts
  • Soft/applied practical skills, personal growth
    and intellectual breadth/open-ended problem
    solving abilities, fluency in expression but with
    a pragmatic end in view
  • Example of European Community Law
  • Solution
  • Modification of the traditional tutorial model
  • Clearer guidance on reading lists

10
Formative Assessment
  • Nicol and MacFarlane-Dick (2006)
  • Clarify meaning of good performance
  • Facilitate the development of self-assessment
  • Deliver high quality information to students
    about their learning process
  • Encourages teaching and peer dialogue around
    learning
  • Encourages positive motivational belief and
    self-esteem
  • Provides opportunities to close the gap between
    current learning and desired performance
  • Provides information to teachers that can be used
    to help shape the teaching

11
Sources
  • Ramsden Learning to Teach in Higher Education
    (2nd edition Routledge/Farmer 2003)
  • http//www.ukcle.ac.uk/index.html
  • http//www.learning.ox.ac.uk/
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