C&IT Comes in Many
Sizes
A Review of the C&IT
Stream at the LILI Conference
7 January 2000, University of Warwick
Reviewed by:
Peter Moodie
University of
Birmingham
[email protected]
1.
Introduction
The second annual
conference of the Learning in Law
Initiative ( LILI ) provided two workshops on the theme 'Using C&IT to
Support Learning and Teaching'.
2.
The Integration of C&IT in Legal Education
Four of the five presentations
illustrated how C&IT is becoming part of the basic structure of
legal education in many institutions. The fifth, by Stephen Migdal
from the University of Wolverhampton, described ambitious plans for
a C&IT component within the collaborative scheme to support
part-time legal education involving the 20 law school members of
CALE (Consortium for Access to Legal Education).
One presentation, by Katherine
Mulcahy from the College of Law in Sydney, featured a major set of
distance learning materials on 18 CD-ROMs covering most of the
professional training course for law graduates in New South Wales.
The remaining three presentations (by David Grantham of Coventry
University, Edwina Higgins and Laura Tatham of Manchester
Metropolitan University, and Veronica Strachan of The Robert Gordon
University) showed how the development of smaller scale C&IT
components within an institution is becoming an increasingly
mainstream approach.
3.
Partnerships Between Institutions
The Dearing Report stressed the
advantages of partnerships between institutions in developing
C&IT projects. Although Katherine Mulcahy's presentation of
materials from a single institution demonstrated that this may not
always be the most appropriate approach, for many purposes, such as
the provision of full-text legal materials, collaboration has clear
advantages. On the other hand, the three presentations of smaller
scale developments suggested that much can be also gained from
encouraging a parallel track of locally produced C&IT materials
as supplements to existing teaching and learning
resources.
4.
Web-based learning
One pre-requisite for the
development of local resources must be that production of these
materials becomes simpler than it once was. Packages which make it
relatively easy to take the first steps in using C&IT are
becoming more common. More institutions are purchasing site
licences for such software, and providing the support which is
necessary for its effective use. Two presentations (by David
Grantham, and Edwina Higgins and Laura Tatham) made use of WebCT.
This is one of several web-based 'integrated learning environments'
through which teachers can make materials available to students,
set various types of questions, encourage participation in
discussion fora, provide space for student groups to produce and
submit their own presentations, and keep track of how individual
students have been performing. Veronica Strachan's presentation
included the use of Question Mark's software to produce enhanced
versions of several true / false tests which she had used
previously in a paper-based format. Recent developments in open
technical standards for software in this field mean that tests or
self-assessment questions using the extensive facilities of
Question Mark Perception can be fully integrated within courses
based on the latest version of WebCT.
5. So
What does the Future Hold?
We may not yet be at the stage where
most people find it as easy to put course materials on their law
school intranet as to produce them in the form of printed lecture
handouts, or as natural to lead an online discussion as to conduct
a traditional tutorial, but these LILI presentations showed the
potential of current software to enable these developments. The
pain that was once associated with adopting C&IT is being
reduced. Edwina Higgins told how, as a newcomer to WebCT, she had
decided to use only its basic facilities in developing a new
'Introduction to the Study of Law' course. This had made the
process manageable, and the material effective.
If the increasing availability of
relatively straightforward tools is encouraging local initiatives
in C&IT, what is the future for courseware such as Iolis which
aims to provide materials for all law schools to use? The
collection of full-text materials in Iolis shows the importance of
the centralised provision of legal materials; nothing similar could
be sensibly attempted by individual institutions. Many of the Iolis
workbooks are used effectively by law students. One significant
problem with Iolis, which is not web-based, is that it is not easy
to integrate specific elements of its workbooks into the web-based
course materials now being produced within institutions.
David
Grantham demonstrated an attempt to
overcome this difficulty. He showed how his own material, presented
though WebCT, can be linked to Iolis by instructing students to
make use of a particular section of Iolis and then return to the
locally generated material. His approach shows that using local
material alongside Iolis can bring greater depth to a student's
experience. However, technical differences between Iolis and other
software leave us still some distance from the possibility of fully
integrating 'central' material with additional local content of the
type so interestingly demonstrated at the LILI
conference .
This is a Conference
Report published on 29 February 2000.
Citation: Moodie P,
'C&IT Comes in Many Sizes: A Review of the C&IT Stream at
the LILI Conference, 7 January 2000, Conference Report,
2000 (1) The Journal of Information, Law and Technology
(JILT). <http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/00-1/moodie.html>.
New citation as at 1/1/04:
<http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/jilt/2000_1/moodie/>
|