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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results
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Steslow, Donna M.; Gardner, Carolyn – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2011
Storytelling has been used in diverse educational settings. It is employed at all educational levels, from elementary schools to graduate schools. Approximately twenty years ago, law school professors began writing about the application of storytelling to various law school subjects as an alternative to the traditional case method. Legal scholars…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Teaching Methods, College Instruction, Business Administration Education
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Epstein, Adam – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2011
One of the most enjoyable and interesting subjects for students taking a business law or legal environment course is the study of torts. Whether a course only allows this discussion for a week or longer, seasoned professors realize that they can capture the attention of students by covering torts topics such as slip-and-fall litigation, defective…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Torts, Court Litigation, Athletics
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Rymsza, Leonard; Saunders, Kurt; Baum, Paul; Tontz, Richard – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2010
This case study, written for use in a multidisciplinary course, exposes students to concepts in business law, economics, and statistics. The case is based upon a hypothetical scenario involving a young woman who, having spent a relaxing day at the beach, heads for home. On the drive home, a flip-flop she is wearing becomes lodged under the gas…
Descriptors: Accidents, Business Education, Case Studies, Traffic Safety
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Bennett, Robert B., Jr. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2010
Legal studies faculty need to take the long view in their academic and professional lives. Taking the long view would seem to be a cliched piece of advice, but too frequently legal studies faculty, like their students, get focused on meeting the next short-term hurdle--getting through the next class, grading the next stack of papers, making it…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Lifelong Learning, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Paetzold, Ramona L. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2010
Those who teach employment discrimination law, particularly as a separate course or part of a course on employment law, are used to covering a broad range of legal models and issues pertaining to the protected classes under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The disparate treatment, disparate impact, and hostile environment models of…
Descriptors: Civil Rights Legislation, Disabilities, Disability Discrimination, Employment Problems
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Stenzel, Paulette L. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
This article focuses on "The Role of Law and Lawyers in Society (Law and Lawyers)", a special capstone course for prelaw majors in business programs, and provides ideas and materials for teaching methods and goals, as well as materials on substantive law and ethics that can be incorporated into a variety of legal studies courses. The author begins…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Ethics, Lawyers, Teaching Methods
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Charters, Darren; Gunz, Sally; Schoner, Vivian – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
For students, the early years at universities can be discouraging as they may face large classes, limited interaction with instructors, and a disconnection between the scholarly experience they might have expected to encounter and that which they in fact endure. In this article the authors describe a case study project (CSP) designed specifically…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Introductory Courses, Legal Education (Professions)
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McAdams, Tony – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
Law classes help reveal the successes of the American legal system. Students observe that the law is honorable, workable, and effective. At the same time, law classes offer the opportunity to look at those situations where the legal system sometimes struggles to achieve its justice goals. Students certainly need to learn that lesson, but they also…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Ethics, Legal Education (Professions), Business Administration
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Epstein, Adam; Anderson, Paul – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
Teaching a specialized law course to students who are not in law school is a refreshing venture for most instructors. It often provides the instructor with an opportunity to teach in an area of specific research interest that is much more focused than the general business law or legal environment of business course. Accordingly, for those…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Schools, College Athletics, Professional Associations
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Kocakulah, Mehmet C.; Austill, A. David; Long, Brett – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
The article aims to provide Certified Public Accountant (CPA) candidates, accounting faculty, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), and the state boards of accountancy with an insight into the business law professor's perspective concerning the legal education of accountants. This article first describes various factors,…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Accounting, Business Education, Teacher Attitudes
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Bennett, Robert B., Jr. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
In this article, the author discusses the "Law and Culture" course that he developed to teach in the Butler University Honors Program. The course looks at some landmark periods or events in legal history and explores how those events were the product of their culture, and how they affected their culture. Among the events or periods that the author…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Court Litigation, Legal Education (Professions), Historical Interpretation
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Jennings, Marianne – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
This paper describes the author's experience and strategy in teaching business law and ethics. Jennings shares how business scandals have changed her three decades of teaching and describes how she has found a way of connecting with students by introducing some cognitive dissonance that stays with them when they are asked to do something in their…
Descriptors: Ethics, Teaching Experience, Business Administration, Legal Education (Professions)
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McDevitt, William J. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
Business law professors have long recognized the pedagogical value of using simulations in the classroom. In-class simulations can serve to develop the all-important critical thinking skills that educated people are expected to possess in today's complex legal environment. Moot court exercises, also known as appellate argumentation or appellate…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Law Related Education, Active Learning, Thinking Skills
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Murphy, Tonia Hap – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2009
This article is intended for business law and legal environment instructors who want to help students understand how they might react when presented with an ethical conflict, no matter how big or how small. The article discusses not only the compelling ethical issues that may arise in reneging cases, but also legal issues. The article provides…
Descriptors: Laws, Ethics, Conflict, Legal Problems
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Mello, Jeffrey A. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2008
This article presents a teaching case that involves the presentation of an actual incident in which a state commission on judicial performance had to balance a judge's First Amendment rights to protected free speech against his public statements about a societal class/group that were deemed to be derogatory and inflammatory and, hence, cast…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Antisocial Behavior, Speech Communication, Social Bias
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