'Order in the Virtual Law
Classroom...Order in the Virtual Law Classroom' - A Closer Look at
American Law Schools in Cyberspace: Constructing Multiple
Instructional Strategies for Effective Internet-based Legal
Education
Dr Robert H Woods, Jr,
J.D
Assistant Professor of
Communication
Department
of Communication , Spring Arbor
University , Spring Arbor, Michigan,
USA
[email protected]
Abstract
The author presents a comprehensive
look at specific online instructional strategies that can help
American legal educators both approximate the residential
(on-campus) experience and satisfy American Bar Association
requirements for quality distance education. In Part One, the ABA's
key principles and guidelines of distance education are presented
as a foundation for online experimentation. The author compares and
contrasts relevant literature related to the delivery of quality
online education in general with ABA criteria. Key concepts such as
interactivity, relationship and community-building, assessment and
learning styles are emphasized in the context of quality legal
education. Then, in Part Two, the author builds on the foundation
established in Part One by presenting seven basic instructional
strategies for law professors delivering law courses online that
incorporate a variety of asynchronous and synchronous models.
Throughout, the author demonstrates how the key objectives of
American legal education as a whole and the case study method
specifically can be achieved online. In response to critics, the
author also demonstrates how critical legal skills and professional
values can effectively be transmitted in the online setting.
Individual instructional strategies are critiqued in terms of
assessment options and how well they help develop previously
identified legal skills and values necessary for the practice of
law. Before concluding, the author proposes several research
designs in an attempt to gather much needed data related to legal
education in cyberspace. Throughout, the author highlights several
cutting-edge distance education programs and projects in the
international legal setting that may serve as models for American
legal educators.
Keywords: Distance
Learning, Paperless Classroom, American Law Schools, United States,
Improving the Quality of Distance Learning, Online discussions,
Asynchronous, Synchronous, IT in Education, Electronic Delivery,
Pedagogy, Andragogy, Collaborative Learning, Blackboard,
Computerising Law Schools, Education Technology, Computer-based
Learning (CBL), Computer Assisted Learning (CAL), Computer Mediated
Communications (CMC), Legal Education, Legal IT, Summative
Evaluation, Formative Evaluation, Case Study Research,
E-Learning.
This is a Refereed
article published on 7 November 2001.
Citation:
Woods R H, ' Order in the
Virtual Law Classroom...Order in the Virtual Law Classroom' - A
Closer Look at American Law Schools in Cyberspace: Constructing
Multiple Instructional Strategies for Effective Internet-based
Legal', Refereed article, 2001 (3) The Journal of Information, Law and Technology
(JILT).
<http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/01-3/woods.html/>. New citation as at 1/1/04:
<http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/jilt/2001_3/woods/>.
1. Introduction
Online (Internet-based) delivery of
coursework is the fastest growing form of distance education in the
United States ( NCES, 2000 ). It has
been predicted that as many as half of all post-secondary students
will be taking at least some of their coursework online in the near
future ( Neeley et al, 1998 ). By 2025, some experts believe that traditional
universities will be replaced by a network or consortia of course
providers with online delivery systems that completely bypass the
traditional classroom ( Dunn, 2000 ).
But despite impressive growth rates
in all higher education, law schools, under the supervision of the
American Bar Association (ABA), remain reluctant to embrace fully
the online educational experience ( Thomas D A,
2001 ). There is currently no ABA
accredited law school that offers a Juris Doctor (J.D) degree
entirely through correspondence study, which includes
Internet-based delivery. The law school at Concord University in
California offers the J.D degree completely online but does so only
with state accreditation[ 1 ]. Why is the ABA hesitant to give its full 'stamp of
approval' to legal education online?[ 2 ]
According to a 1997 memo published
by the Consultant on Legal Education to the ABA, the law school
experience is of such 'distinct variety' that special caution must
be exercised when considering distance (online) education[
3 ]. The reasons,
notes David Thomas, professor of law, Brigham Young University, are
'wide-ranging and idiosyncratic' ( Thomas D A,
2001 ). Some believe that law school's
time-honored pedagogy, that is, the Socratically-driven 'case study
method'[ 4 ],can not
be sufficiently replicated or otherwise captured online
( Johnson, 2001b ). Similarly, others argue that essential legal skills,
values or professional ethics can not be taught in the absence of
real-time encounters with law faculty ( Johnson,
2001b ). Some question whether the
social-communal interchange involving students and faculty, which
is so necessary for legal training, can happen in the online
setting. As Barry Courier, current Deputy Consultant on Legal
Education for the ABA, explained, 'substantively, law is after all
a social/cultural enterprise'[ 5 ]. Still others are
worried about more practical issues such as class size and
management, online assessment, preserving student identity, and
academic honesty[ 6 ]. Finally, there is real concern that students who
receive their degrees through distance education may not be allowed
to sit for the bar examination, since most states require one to
hold a J.D. from a school that meets 'acceptable established
educational standards' ( ABA Memorandum, 1997 ). Taken together, these concerns lead many to conclude
that internet-based legal education will never be more than a
supplement to traditional (residential) law programs in one form or
another[ 7 ].
Nonetheless, despite such
hesitations, the ABA has agreed to permit delivery of legal courses
via distance education in very limited circumstances. Its desire is
to 'gather information on distance learning for ultimate
incorporation into the Standards,' and toward this end has given
permission to ABA-accredited law schools to conduct experiments in
distance learning. The ABA has even offered key principles for
distance education along with delivery guidelines ( ABA
Memorandum, 1997 )[ 8 ]. Several law
schools have already accepted the ABA's invitation to experiment in
the delivery of legal education online. Cornell Law School and
Harvard Law School have used a variety of synchronous[ 9 ] and
asynchronous[ 10 ] models of delivery over the last several
years[ 11 ], and
Regent University School of Law began the first online LL.M in
International Taxation in 1998[ 12 ] using an
asynchronous model. Regent will offer J.D courses starting Fall
2001 using the same model[ 13 ]. These efforts
have no doubt been inspired, or spurred on to some extent, by early
international law programs, degrees [ 14 ] and
projects[ 15 ].
But while law faculty undertaking
the challenge to teach online possess knowledge of the law, since
the idea of legal education online is so new, few possess an
'in-depth understanding of online andragogy or pedagogy and course
administration,' according to Tom Diggs, Director of Regent
University Law School's Online LL.M[ 16 ]. As Olcott correctly observes,
distance learning is a:
'collaborative endeavor requiring
faculty to work with other experts in designing instruction,' which
is 'antithetical to a [United States law school] culture that has
historically placed the locus of control for instruction with
faculty' ( Olcott,
1999 ).
Consequently, t here is little consensus on 'best practices' for
bringing 'order' to the virtual law classroom. Likewise, there is
little systematic research related to delivering and assessing
quality online legal education in ways that approximate the
'distinct variety' that is the traditional residential law school
experience. Pedagogically-sound instructional s trategies are needed, therefore, that can approximate
or otherwise mimic the objectives of the Socratic method while
teaching necessary legal skills and modelling professional ethics
and values. Such strategies should further facilitate the gathering
of empirical and other forms of data[ 17 ] (in accordance
with the ABA's directive) and operate as a heuristic that moves law
professors toward 'best practices' .
In light of the foregoing, in Part
One the author begins with a brief review of the ABA's key
principles and guidelines of distance education, since they form
the framework in which any online experimentation should be
conducted. In the process, literature related to the delivery of
quality online education in general will be reviewed for its
compatibility with ABA criteria and legal education as a whole. Key
concepts such as interactivity, relationship and
community-building, assessment and learning styles will be
emphasized given the concerns related to such areas mentioned
above. In Part Two, the author then builds on the foundation
established in Part One by presenting seven basic instructional
strategies for delivering law courses online that incorporate a
variety of asynchronous and synchronous models. Throughout, in an
attempt to more fully imagine how the virtual law school can
'really work'[ 18 ], the author suggests ways in which the key objectives
of the case study method - a law school's primary pedagogical tool
- can be achieved through a combination of instructional
strategies. The author also explores, in response to the concerns
of some legal educators[ 19 ], several ways
in which legal skills and professional values can effectively be
transmitted in the online setting[ 20 ]. Individual
strategies will be critiqued in terms of assessment options and how
well they help develop previously identified legal skills and
values necessary for the practice of law. Before concluding,
several potential research designs are suggested.
2.
PART I
2.1 Principles and Practices of Quality Online Legal
Education
As previously noted, the ABA has
outlined several key principles for delivering legal education at a
distance. These principles apply to all forms of distance education
and therefore function as a foundation upon which online efforts
for legal educators should be built. They also reflect, in part,
the ABA's understanding of what constitutes quality online
education for law schools. As will be demonstrated below, they are
highly compatible with the delivery of education in the online
setting.
The ABA's first principle
emphasizes that legal education must be more than the:
'mere delivery of information or
simply learning facts, history or even logic' ( ABA
Memorandum 1997 ).
Closely related to the first
principle is the expectation that learning must be participatory
and not passive (i.e; must be active), and must include skills
training[ 21 ]. Furthermore, the ABA expects legal education at a
distance to involve interaction with faculty both in the classroom
and outside the classroom. It also expects interaction between
students, who are encouraged to learn from each other through
'inquiry and challenge, review and study groups'[ 22 ]. The Consultant
on Legal Education reinforces this key principle of 'interactivity'
in the guidelines that accompany the principles just stated
( ABA Memorandum, 1997 ).
In brief, the key principles for
delivering legal education at a distance may thus be said to
include: active, participatory learning that emphasizes
interactivity in the context of community between faculty and
students, and individual as well as collaborative learning
activities that develop the skills and values a student needs to
function and think like a lawyer[ 23 ].
2.2 Facilitating Learning and Cultivating
Relationships in Online Instruction
To begin, the literature supports
the notion, consistent with the ABA's first principle, that quality
online learning is more than the mere dissemination or simple
learning of facts. As Knupfer argued, effective use of the computer
as a resource in education 'necessitates changes in pedagogy'
( Knupfer, 1993 ),
with the teacher taking the role of 'facilitator of information'
( Knupfer, 1993 ),
while guiding the student toward collaborative solutions. In order
for instructors to be successful in facilitating computer-mediated
learning, they must therefore to some degree 'be willing to release
the control of learning to the students and feel secure in a
different role'[ 24 ], all the while keeping course objectives and specific
subject matter in mind. Online learning could in this sense be
'enabling technology' that empowers students to learn through
collective and collaborative peer learning of the kind described by
Boud, Cohen and Sampson ( 1999 ). (See
also Chalmers and Violet, 1997 , and Slavin, 1995 ).
Such notions of online facilitation
are entirely consistent with the student-centered, active approach
embedded in the law school's traditional case study method[
25 ]. At the heart
of the case study method is the Socratic dialogue, where the
instructor through rigorous question and answer actively
encourages, prods, and manoeuvres students to analyze the facts,
issues, rules of law, and reasoning behind the courts' decisions.
In the process, the law professor may 'hide the ball'[ 26 ], as it were, as
knowledge of Black letter law[ 27 ] is constructed,
deconstructed, and re-constructed again via faculty-to-student and
student-to-student exchanges designed to analyze and compare
existing case law before synthesizing it with the whole[ 28 ]. The case study
method thus operates significantly in a constructivist learning
environment, which places emphasis on relationships, collaboration,
inquiry and student invention[ 29 ].
Second, there is a clear indication
that fostering interactions and cultivating interpersonal
relationships between students and instructors - and establishing a
community atmosphere for learning - is not only possible in the
online setting but essential to facilitate quality learning. For
online education to be effective, instructors must not only play
'intellectual' and organizational roles as the disseminators of
knowledge and official agenda-setters, but social and relational
roles as well[ 30 ]. As Kearsley remarks:
'a high degree of interactivity and
participation' are the 'most important roles of the instructor in
online classes' ( Kearsley, 2000 ,
p.78)[ 31 ].
Clow ( 1999 ),
Phillips and Peters ( 1999 ), Roblyer
( 1999 ), and
Hacker and Wignall ( 1997 ), all
concluded that sufficient interaction with instructors and other
students was important based on their studies of the student
perceptions of particular online college learning
experiences[ 32 ]. Moreover, Wilkinson and Sherman ( 1991 )
demonstrated that lack of personalization, or humanization, and
infrequent interaction between students and instructors were among
the reasons given by students for not completing distance education
courses[ 33 ]. A
high degree of faculty-student interaction will help overcome
students' feelings of 'remoteness,' which is one of the greatest
obstacles to distance learning ( Everhart, 1999 ), and may reduce student attrition over the long run.
Learning at a distance can thus be both isolating and highly
interactive at the same time ( Eastmond, 1995 ).
As for building a legal learning
community for law faculty and students, scholars and educational
practitioners have called for and begun to study the challenges and
benefits of building community within online courses. Wiesenberg
and Hutton ( 1996 )
demonstrate that building a learning community is necessary for a
successful faculty/student relationship. Dede concurs and further
observes that:
'to succeed, distributed learning
must balance virtual and direct interaction in sustaining communion
among people' ( Dede, 1996 ).
Some attempts have been made to
enhance online community through brief on-campus residency
requirements[ 34 ], which could also be used by law faculty to teach
skills and model values[ 35 ]. Palloff and
Pratt ( 1999 ) offer
instructors guidelines for developing these learning communities
that law professors can adapt to the online classroom. Kim
describes nine effective principles for facilitators who desire to
build online communities in any setting, a process described as
'social scaffolding' ( Kim, 1998 ).
Ebersole and Woods practically extend Kim's principles in the
context of Martin Buber's authentic exchange known as 'I-Thou' (Ebersole and Woods, 2001).
Online facilitators build a sense of 'classroom community' through
a variety of methods, including but not limited to: frequency
( Woods,
2002 ) and immediacy ( Baker,
2001 ), audio emails ( Woods and
Keeler, 2001 ), and personalized
discussion folders ( Kim, 2000 ).
In short, even though what scholars
have learned about computer-mediated communication and the
formation of online communities has been limited and open to
debate[ 36 ], it
does suggest that the nature and quality of interpersonal and group
communication are critical factors in the success of online
distance courses and programs. 'Interactivity' implies, consistent
with the ABA's guideline No.5 ( ABA, 1997 ), that learning online must be considered,
fundamentally, a 'social' experience. Interactivity through guided
discussion not only helps build critical thinking (as part of the
Socratic exchange), but also aids in the development of community.
Interactivity further differentiates the online course from
independent, self-directed study[ 37 ], as:
'students become participants in a
discourse by entering into the relevant process of textual
analysis, interpretation and judgment, and by learning to think,
speak and write like lawyers' ( Anderson T,
1999 ).
2.3 Assessment
Traditional approaches to
assessment remain unchanged for the most part in the online
setting, although the implementation of such assessment may require
some adjustment. It is essential that assessment of students
engaged in online learning be appropriate to the medium
( Collis,
1997 ). Accordingly, emphasis must be
placed on creating active learning environments that reflect
real-world contexts consistent with the needs of adult learners
(see Carnevale, 2001a , 2001b , Knowles, 1970 , Eastmond, 2000 ). This also means that interactive, collaborative
group work in the context of problem-based learning that also
allows for self-directed learning is essential[ 38 ]. The way we
deal with assessments online demands significant attention during
the design phase since instructors lack the co-presence that
affords awareness of non-verbal communication cues, which
ultimately lets them assess student success in achieving course
objectives and outcomes[ 39 ].
Assessment strategies can be both
summative[ 40 ] and formative[ 41 ]. Law schools
use both types (see fn41 for reference
to international law school use). The end-of-semester essay exam is
the typical summative assessment and oral case briefing is the main
formative assessment[ 42 ]. In any case, the literature supports the notion that
quality assessments, whether summative or formative, should not be
limited to a single measurement, but consist of multiple
measurements. A classical expression of assessment by Anderson and
colleagues captures these ideas:
'assessment, as opposed to simple
one-dimensional measurement, is frequently described as
multitrait-multimethod; that is, it focuses upon a number of
variables judged to be important and utilizes a number of
techniques to assay them... . Its techniques may also be
multisource ... and/or multijudge' ( Anderson et al,
1975 , p.27).
Put another way, quality assessment
does not limit itself solely to traditional approaches such as
standard testing, but includes a variety of approaches, such as
observing and critiquing student products along with other types of
real-world simulations[ 43 ] - a type of student-focused, outcomes-based education
( Carnevale, 2001a , 2001b ). The seven instructional strategies discussed below
in Part II can be used by instructors to integrate quality
assessments into the online law classroom in the manner just
described.
In addition to being summative or
formative, assessment can include traditional formats (e.g;
selected-response formats found in multiple choice exams or
quizzes, Carnevale, 2001a , 2001b )
or more performance-based learning activities[ 44 ]. In the online
setting we move away from traditional forms of assessment to more
performance-based learning activities based on, in part, the
medium's capability to foster and otherwise promote multiple levels
of interactivity and self-directed learning[ 45 ]. We also move
toward performance-based assessments in an attempt to engage higher
cognitive levels. In the process, more emphasis is placed on active
learning, which includes such things as portfolios, essays,
projects, and case studies[ 46 ]. In performance
assessments, instructors require students to formulate answers or
create products that demonstrate their knowledge and skills
( Herman
et al, 1992 ). Oral case briefing acts
as the main formative performance assessment in residential law
programs[ 47 ], and mid and end-of-semester essay exams are the main
summative performative assessments[ 48 ]. Note that
since performance assessments emphasize collaboration,
relationships, inquiry, and invention via guided interactivity,
they are in harmony with the ABA's principles of quality distance
education.
Whatever form of assessment law
professors use in the online setting, it is imperative that law
schools build in safeguards to protect against dishonesty and
plagiarism. For 'high-stakes' summative assessment, i.e; such as
mid-term or final essay examinations along the traditional law
school model, students can be assessed at centralized (on-campus,
residential) or decentralized proctored locations[ 49 ]. Test security
concerns in this case may be similar to the typical take-home exams
used in some second and third year law courses. To identify
plagiarism, instructors can use online services specifically
designed for such detection[ 50 ]. In Legal
Research and Writing courses, which seem ideally suited to online
delivery, or in other second and third year courses requiring
research papers or briefs, instructors can conduct a key word or
phrase search using Westlaw or Lexis/Nexis, or one of the more
reliable Internet Search Engines. Most web-based course management
platforms now come fully equipped with password-protected options
to help insure student identity. Some high-tech options are even
available, such as voice and retinal scans or fingerprints
( Jain et
al, 1999 ), but these are typically too
expensive for most institutions to incorporate into the online
classroom.
Less technical ways to encourage
honesty may be incorporated into assessment strategies as well. For
example, in assessing required online discussion (discussed in
greater detail below in Part II), instructors can read each
student's posts/replies throughout the semester to get a good sense
of his or her mastery level. Summative products that differ greatly
in style or mastery from required discussion can then be
'red-flagged' for closer analysis using one of the more technical
services identified above[ 51 ]. Instructors
could even perform reliability checks of students' levels of
mastery with follow-up phone conversations, online audio
conferences, or online chats[ 52 ]. At a minimum,
a clear definition of plagiarism along with university policies
regarding consequences should be included in the course syllabus
and stated up-front in the Announcement section of the course.
Specific examples of plagiarism may help cement this idea into the
minds of students.
Timed-tests might be used to reduce
plagiarism when proctored-options are not feasible. If
selected-response assessments are desired - for example,
multiple-choice exams along the lines of the multi-state bar
exam[ 53 ],
different exams can be prepared for each student from a larger pool
of questions, or the same questions can be reordered for each
student, which can then be electronically graded[ 54 ]. Designing
performance assessments that are active, student-centered and of
special interest to the individual learner may foster intellectual
ownership and reduce the likelihood of plagiarism. A critical part
of this process is creating several variations of the same
assignment from which students can choose[ 55 ].
Finally, law professors can use
'learning contracts' to aid in the design of quality assessments
for internet-based courses. Learning contracts provide a means for
continuous feedback, help the facilitator and learner share
responsibility for learning[ 56 ], increase
accountability in the learning process[ 57 ], and can even
be used as an instructional strategy to bring about many practical
benefits to the online learner[ 58 ]. Learning
contracts are powerful tools for e-learners in the online
environment since students are not afforded the luxury of meeting
with the professor and class face-to-face to discuss learning
goals, objectives, or expectations[ 59 ]. The learning
contract lets the instructor be very clear and concise about what
is expected from the learner - more clear and concise, at times,
than when meeting face-to-face. Besides, the very idea of a
'contract' carries special weight in the law classroom, and may
thus facilitate skills training to some degree, if properly
integrated[ 60 ].
2.4 Learning Styles
As Cross observes:
'It takes no special knowledge of
research to recognize that we all have characteristic styles for
collecting and organizing information into useful knowledge'
( Cross,
1976 , p.112).
However, as Manning points
out:
'it is comparatively easy for us to
repress or avoid the existence of individual differences whenever
it is convenient or economical or comfortable for us to do so'
( Manning, 1976 ,
p.295).
In online legal education, this
means avoiding the 'one-approach-fits-all' mentality when it comes
to delivering course content (Friedland, 1996). While it is beyond
the scope of this piece to fully address learning styles, some
elementary observations are in order[ 61 ].
Some learning styles and
personality needs can be particularly well addressed in an online
(legal) learning environment (see, for example, Ellsworth,
1995 , pp.29-36). For example, while
the traditional Socratic (case study) method is beneficial to aural
learners, threaded discussion forums can be beneficial to
non-visual learners by giving them time to reflect and organize
their thoughts. Instructors may also utilize PowerPoint
presentations as downloaded or attached files to aid visual
learners, and when combined with audio narration can aid aural
learners simultaneously[ 62 ]. CD-ROM or
other computer-assisted learning activities and simulations[
63 ], tutorials or
workshops, used in conjunction with threaded discussion, can be
used to assist active learners[ 64 ]. Introverted
personality types may communicate more frequently via
computer-mediated communication than in face-to-face
situations[ 65 ]. Students in the traditional law classroom setting
who participate only when called upon to brief a case may become
significantly more involved in threaded discussions online
( Grantham, 1999 , 2000 ).
Their increased interchanges, in turn, may benefit students who are
already active in discussions. Critical thinking, analysis, and
writing skills essential to practising law are enhanced for all
involved in the process[ 66 ].
Gender is another significant
variable in the learning styles of online students[ 67 ]. Women are more
likely to seek supportive communication environments
(c f , Burnham, 1998 , Brunner, 1991 , Ryan and Hicks, 1997 ), and thus have significantly different expectations
when it comes to communication online[ 68 ]. Messages from
males engaged in threaded discussions tend to be more certain,
confrontational, autonomous, and abstract than messages from
females. Also, messages from women tend to be more empathetic, and
co-operative, whereas messages from men tend to be more controlling
by nature ( Blum, 1999 )[
69 ]. Since the
large-class Socratic method is authoritarian and competitive by
nature, and does not favour co-operation or supportive
communication environments, it tends to discourage participation
from women and other minorities in most cases ( Rhode,
2001 , p.B-15). Ellsworth, however,
observes that using:
'CMC provides a less hierarchical
approach, which better meets the learning needs of some learners
than do the didactic teaching/learning methods of many conventional
settings ( Ellsworth, 1995 , p.35).
Thus, unlike the Socratic method of
instruction in the residential setting, Internet-based legal
education can be more egalitarian if properly facilitated[
70 ].
In sum, because two learners may
participate in the same online class, but have different learning
experiences (see, e.g; Tyler, 1949 ),
legal educators must organize situations that address the various
facets of learning in order to provide significant experiences for
each class participant. The online setting affords law professors
unique opportunities to accommodate a greater range of learning
styles than is possible in the traditional law school classroom
setting, while at the same time allowing them to satisfy the key
components embedded in the Socratic exchange. In designing online
learning courses for law schools, providing significant learning
experiences for each class participant may be accomplished by
utilizing multiple instructional strategies of the nature and type
discussed in Part II below.
3.
PART II
3.1 Multiple Instructional Strategies for Effective
Delivery of Online Legal Education
When 'properly structured and
facilitated' ( Azarmsa, 1993 ,
p.13), online educational activities can be powerful tools in our
'instructional arsenal' ( Azarmsa, 1993 ,
p.13). When properly designed and delivered, they can be equal or
in some cases superior to the quality of work submitted by
on-campus (traditional) students[ 71 ].
Numerous theories exist which apply
to education facilitated in traditional higher education
environments ( Knowles, 1970 , Rogers, 1969 , Witkin, 1976 ,
pp.38-72). Unfortunately, since utilizing the Internet for
education is relatively new, few theoretical frameworks have been
developed primarily for application to the Internet, ( Paliwala,
2001 ). Therefore, of the many
instructional strategies available for use in the online learning
environment, most have not been developed specifically for online
instruction, but are currently employed in traditional classrooms
and are successfully adapted for facilitating online
learning[ 72 ]. As such, the guiding criterion for educators must be
learner outcomes. Educators must be able to choose a learning
technique that is 'most effective for accomplishing a particular
educational objective' ( Knowles, 1999 , p.3). Put another way, 'technological issues [must
be] subordinate to educational ones' ( Paliwala,
1998 ).
As applied to American law schools
in the online setting, this means that in order to be a viable
means of instruction, methods and strategies which are utilized in
the traditional law classroom are essential to online legal
education since they convey both the content of the law and are
'considered the heart of the [legal] educational format'
(see, Friedland, 1996 and also, Houle, 1974 ,
p.153). This also means that methods other than those traditionally
used by law schools that satisfy the same learning goals and
objectives identified with the law school experience - for example,
improving students' thinking ability, learning substantive legal
doctrine, transitioning students from legal academia to real-world
law practice, developing expertise in an area of law, teaching
practical lawyering skills, fostering professional awareness and
self-evaluation and self-reliance, to name only a few ( Friedland,
1996 , pp.20,23-24,25-27), must be
considered when adapting learning experiences to the online
setting.
3.2 Traditional American Law School Delivery
Methods
The traditional classroom context
in nearly all American law schools has been dominated by the case
study method for nearly 150 years ( Friedland, 1996 , p.3). It remains as dominant as ever despite serious
criticisms regarding its effectiveness (see, Sheppard,
1997 , p.621, Floyd,
1997 and Thomas, R H
1994 )[ 73 ] and strong
calls for reform[ 74 ]. Lecture is the second most frequently used method
during all three years of law school ( Friedland, 1996 , pp.27-29). It is used quite regularly at the
beginning of class to set the stage for the subject matter or at
the end of the class as a means to summarize relevant rules of law
or to clarify misstatements that occurred during the class
session[ 75 ].
Small groups and role-play are two additional strategies used with
regularity by most law schools[ 76 ].
The case method is a:
'dynamic rather than a static
approach to law, emphasizing [as its objective] [higher order]
reasoning skills-[for example, analysis, application, synthesis and
evaluation][ 77 ] - as well as substantive [case] law' ( Dutile,
1981 , p.1).
which includes lower levels of
thinking as well (for example, knowledge and understanding).
Instead of merely outlining Black letter rules of law through
lecture, instructors pose questions to students that encourage them
to analyze the law of decided cases in a specific subject area and
to then apply it to new factual situations ( Sheppard,
1997 , pp.586-87). This dynamic merger
of case law and Socratic dialogue rather 'pretentiously' came to be
known as the Socratic method ( Stevens, 1983 ,
p.55).
Relevant to online instructional
strategies is the fact that discussion - a prominent instructional
strategy discussed below under section titled 'Seven Basic
Instructional Strategies for Law Online', plays a key role in the
Socratic method ( Vandervilt, 1981 , p.22). The method has a built-in participatory
element and provides an 'actual experiment,' whereby a student
comes into contact with a real situation (i.e., court case) with
known results[ 78 ], which further adds a real-world performance-based
component to the mix. If properly facilitated, the student engages
his 'creative energies by the continual speculation as to the
result' ( Dutile, 1981 ,
p.2). In the hands of an able professor, the Socratic method can
cultivate valuable professional skills such as 'careful
preparation, reasoned analysis, and fluent oral presentations'
( Rhode,
2001 , p.B-15, see, Friedland
1996 , pp.20-23).
Further relevant is the fact that
in the process students are required to 'think on their feet'
( Warner
et al, 1998 ) and articulate their
views and demonstrate their understanding of the deeper reasoning
behind the law in a coherent fashion in a public forum
( Sheppard 1997 , p.601). These skills are important learning
objectives that will help prepare the student to practice law
( Uphoff
et al, 1997 , p.381, Silecchia,
1996 , pp.245,247-248, Friedland,
1996 , pp.20,27,28). Key features of
the Socratic method may thus be said to include personal
interactions and immediacy. Online instructional strategies that
approximate the residential experience should reflect or otherwise
foster, to the degree possible, a sense of co-presence and
immediacy between faculty and students as part of the
exchange.
A final aspect of the case method
relevant to delivery in the online setting is that it has a certain
amount of adaptability. It is worth noting here that the method's
founder did not originally include any detail on specific classroom
techniques ( Stevens, 1983 ,
p.55), which opens the door for the presentation of other
instructional methods so long as they can satisfy the appropriate
learning objectives.
3.3 Seven Basic Instructional Strategies for
Law Online
The following seven instructional
strategies are currently used in the traditional classroom in
higher education and will be discussed in terms of their
compatibility with and adaptation to online legal education. All
are used in varying degrees throughout a student's three years of
law school. They include:
(1) lecture;
(2) discussion format (which
includes such methods as small group work and role-play)
( Friedland, 1996 , pp.27,29-30);
(3) case study/analysis;
(4) project method;
(5) symposium;
(6) panel: and
(7) apprenticeship (which includes
mentorships, externships, and clinics).
These strategies can be integrated
into the curriculum using a variety of delivery models, whether
primarily asynchronous, synchronous, or through a
combination of asynchronous/synchronous approaches, referred to
here as the 'e-learning' model[ 79 ].
3.3.1 Lecture
The lecture format is one of the
most frequently used instructional methods in adult education
( Farrah,
1990 , pp.161-186). A 1994 survey
revealed that 94% of law professor respondents said they lectured
in their second and third year courses to some degree ( Friedland,
1996 , p.29). Most law faculty teaching
first year courses used lectures to some degree as part of their
classroom presentation as well ( Ibid , pp.27,29).
Consistent with residential law
school classroom dynamics, the lecture format assumes that the
educator is the expert. Given the dominance of the Socratic method
in law pedagogy, most lectures in the law school setting tend to
follow the 'ideal,' that is, they are only used to:
'lay foundations, show the way,
ease the passage, as the student works through the subject'
( Cox,
1994 , p.59).
Lectures are:
'an efficient way of imparting
information in a scheduled way without interruption, and with less
planning than in most other teaching methods' ( Broadwell,
1980 , p.3).
But an effective lecture does not
occur in a relational vacuum. A good lecturer is one who gets to
know personally his students and develops and adapts the material
based on this personal knowledge of individual learners' needs (see
generally, Knowles, 1950 ). Notably, it appears that the lecture is most
effective in accomplishing its specific purposes when used in
combination with other instructional strategies of the kind listed
herein. In the online setting, instructors can present lectures in
a variety of formats in combination with other delivery strategies
to meet the diverse needs and learning styles of students. Some
lecture formats, consistent with quality online delivery, can even
be designed to include interactivity and participation of some
kind.
At the basic level, text-based
lectures (in note or outline form) prepared by the instructor or
guest lecturer can be sent to the students as attached emails or
posted to a 'lectures' web page. This is a format frequently used
by the law school at Concord University[ 80 ]. Instructors
using web-based course management platforms such as Blackboard,
WebCT, E-college, WebBoard, University Online, and Top Class, to
name a few, also have the capability to centralize lectures by
posting to a 'Course Materials' section. Such centers could also be
used to post 'Weekly Bulletins' along the lines provided by the
Australian Taxation Studies Program ( Smith and Walpole,
1998 ). Lectures can be prepared (with
limited technical skill or training) in video or audio form to aid
the aural (non-visual) learner[ 81 ]. Microsoft's
PowerPoint is a basic user-friendly platform to combine text-based
lectures with multimedia components. Using this posting method,
instructors can provide background for dense subject areas like
constitutional law, state and federal courts, and contracts - as a
precursor to more interactive learning activities, or to bring
clarity to more technical subject matters as civil procedure,
evidence, or real property future interests. In the case of future
interests or federal courts, a Whiteboard function can be used
along with the lecture to diagram complex relationships to the
benefit of visual learners[ 82 ]. Hyperlinked
datasets, of the kind used in the United Kingdom ( Paliwala,
1991 , Widdison,
1995 , Jones and Scully,
1996 ), may be used as part of lectures
to accomplish many of the same objectives just described. These
datasets:
'enable students to search for
texts, to browse, to instantly compare, to explore new pathways
through links' ( Paliwala, 2001 )[ 83 ].
For lectures posted over the
Internet and downloaded at the student's leisure in the manner
prescribed above, limited bandwidth and slower download times
require that such presentations be shorter and more direct than
live lectures. A short lecture of 10-15 minutes should provide
enough information to supplement the key rules of law in the cases
covered during a single week's reading and facilitate additional
learning activities. The posting format has the advantage of
allowing the student to revisit the lecture as many times as needed
to master the material. Mastery can then be assessed during or at
the end of the lecture by linking students to selected-response
quizzes or exams with immediate results, short essay assessments,
or planned discussion. Most institutions currently have in place
the necessary web technical support staff needed to implement
pre-recorded streaming audio and video. In any case, special
attention should be given to avoiding 'information
overload'[ 84 ] when posting lectures to the web.
Technological developments now make
it possible for instructors to produce, or 'burn,' lectures onto
interactive CD-Roms that can be sent to students as part of a
materials package[ 85 ]. CDs can include larger amounts of textual
information as well as multimedia data at a higher quality than
streaming. Interactive lectures in this format could integrate
web-based links that let students conduct supplementary reading in
certain areas, or complete computer-scored quizzes on material
covered up to a certain point (note: the IOLIS
project described earlier, is an
example of this type of computer-based learning). Links within
CD-Rom-based lectures (as well as video and audio lectures) can
also be directed to specific discussion rooms so students can take
part in simultaneous class discussion related to the
lecture[ 86 ]. In
an e-learning model, interactive computer-assisted tutorials
covering a specific subject matter could be used as a primer to be
followed up later by a live (synchronous) chat[ 87 ]. Artificial
intelligence-based computer assisted learning (AICAL) ( Paliwala,
2001 , see also, Lodder and Verheij,
1999 ), which incorporates artificial
intelligence sources with casebooks, may become more cost efficient
in the near future and create new options for combining more
traditional asynchronous and synchronous learning formats[
88 ]. These types of
e-learning models - that is, those which combine programmed
asynchronous with synchronous formats, are consistent with Robin
Widdison's prediction (see also, Moodie 1997 , Grantham, 1999 ) that we will see a move toward convergence between
more traditional computer-based learning (for example, IOLIS) and
computer mediated communications in the future of computerized
legal education ( Widdison, 1999 ).
Lectures may be presented using a
synchronous model as well. For example, law students scattered
across the state or around the country can simultaneously view live
multimedia lectures over the Internet using RealAudio (or more
powerful videoconferencing software)[ 89 ]. Students can
then ask questions of the speaker either during or at the end of
the lecture through a live chat room, along the lines of CNN's
'Talk Back Live,' or through follow-up asynchronous or synchronous
discussions[ 90 ]. Cornell University Law School's Legal Information
Institute used this synchronous approach in a course on Copyrights
and Digital Works when it broadcast weekly lectures over the
Internet via Web-based video-conferencing to students at several
law schools across the country (see Martin, 1998 ). Live lectures, as with posted or recorded lectures,
have the advantage of allowing instructors to include other law
professors, experts, or legal practitioners from around the
country[ 91 ].
However, despite advances in videoconferencing software, most
programs still find video conferencing cost prohibitive and
difficult to co-ordinate. Students are often required to move to a
site specifically designed for video-conferencing ( Smith
and Walpole, 1998 ). Furthermore, such
movement would seem to defeat the chief advantage of flexibility
and adaptability that time-independent, place-independent learning
environments provide.
Note that legal educators on the
international front have already made good use of video and audio
conferencing in the ways described above. For example, in 1999 the
CTI Law Technology Center seminar on Conferencing Systems brought together learners in
Arizona with learners in Leicester, Glasgow and Saarbrucken. The
University of New South Wales and the College of Law used video
conferencing as a follow-up to asynchronous text-based discussion
boards with students in Australia and the United Kingdom
( Paliwala, 2001 , see also Widdison, 1996 ). The Australian Taxation Studies program (ATAX) used
the audio conferencing to link groups of up to 36 students with a
lecturer. Once connected students could then, under the direction
of the facilitator, discuss concepts and issues developed in the
study guide with other students and raise questions for the
lecturer. ATAX program directors found this to be a flexible mode
of delivery since lectures could be tape-recorded and re-played to
accommodate the busy work schedules of participating students
( Smith and Walpole,
1998 ).
3.3.2 Discussion
Discussion, through its many forms,
is the adult educational method 'par excellence' ( Brookfield,
1990 , p.187).
As Brookfield observes, the
discussion format:
'is revered as the educational
method which is the most participatory and the most respectful of
learners' ( 1990 ,
p.187).
It encourages active, participatory
learning, two cornerstones of effective online learning. More
importantly, perhaps, as mentioned above, discussion is the focal
point of the Socratic method. Consistent with goals of the Socratic
method, the discussion format encourages learners to analyze
'alternative ways of thinking and acting' ( Ibid , p.192),
and assists them in exploring their own experiences so that they
can become better critical thinkers. To be effective, discussions
should be as diverse as the learners involved ( Ibid ,
p.187).
While several modes for
facilitating online discussion exist[ 92 ], the
proliferation and affordability of user-friendly 'e-classrooms,'
that is, web-based educational software packages, sometimes
referred to as web-based course management platforms, that
facilitate asynchronous and synchronous exchanges in a clear,
organized fashion, are the preferred mode. Not only are they
affordable, but they make sense from an administrative perspective
as well[ 93 ].
Several laws schools on the international front have adopted these
platforms (for e.g; Blackboard ) into their pedagogy in place of more basic e-mail
discussion groups that were less user-friendly in terms of
collaborative learning ( Fairhurst, 2000 ).
Judith Boettcher encourages the
common practice of using small groups to facilitate online
discussion and manage large class sizes ( Boettcher,
1998 ). There is little research
dealing with the optimal size of online courses. Most of the
anecdotal data suggest that an average of about 20 is optimal,
while several have reported in the 35 to 40 range and even as high
as 60[ 94 ].
Whatever the class size, discussion groups are the most effective
way to manage discussion. A dominant practice is to randomly assign
students to small groups of 5-7 members for the entire
semester[ 95 ]. Boettcher also observes the critical relationship
between the use of small discussion groups and the creation of
online community[ 96 ].
The kind of discussion that occurs
in the small group setting provides law students with the
opportunity to discuss content, share ideas related to the relevant
issues and applicable rules of law in select cases, and problem
solve by drawing conclusions about the cases with other students
(see, e.g; Houle, 1974 , Kemp et al, 1994 ).
The exchange occurring within the small group is usually on 'higher
intellectual levels than is possible solely with the recall of the
information' ( Kemp et al, 1994 ,
p.150). Along the way, students can develop skills essential to
practising law. Learners will build competence by presenting their
own ideas as well as considering ideas put forth by others in a
public arena that is open to comment and criticism. As Steven
Friedland observes, small groups are regularly used by law
professors for such reasons and are ideal for teaching critical
legal skills ( Friedland, 1996 , pp.29-30). Law professors also use small groups to
'resolve doctrinal issues, work out problems, or synthesize rules
of law' ( Ibid ,
p.29).
As presented below , discussion can occur in a
variety of formats and may be assessed in either a summative or
formative fashion. Discussion within each format may be
asynchronous or synchronous and may be organized in the individual
or group mode. Perhaps the most popular type is asynchronous,
sometimes referred to as 'threaded discussions'. In individual
response mode, each student in each group reflects on the
instructors' questions (usually based on assigned readings) and
posts his individual response in the assigned discussion forum,
which is then assessed by the instructor. The discussion folder for
a particular set of assigned readings may remain open for one or
two weeks before moving on to the next set of questions. In a group
response mode, the group as a whole brainstorms about the question
or problem-presented and then presents a single group response. In
each case, the instructor follows up with a series of questions to
individual group participants in Socratic fashion that are designed
to enhance critical thinking skills, expand students' knowledge
base, and link participants. There are four basic small group
discussion formats that could be used in the virtual law classroom.
They are:
(1) Case brief;
(2) Co-counsel:
(3) Opposing Parties;
and
(4) Legal Eagles.
Case Brief . The case brief is a form of asynchronous/synchronous
discussion that incorporates the case method's basic IRAC formula -
Issue, Rule, Application, and Conclusion - in the context of a
Socratic dialogue. In the independent response mode, it can
approximate the oral briefing that occurs in the traditional
classroom setting. For example, each student would be required to
prepare the standard case briefs covered by a particular week's set
of readings[ 97 ]. Students would then post these briefs on the first
day of the week within a specific discussion folder, giving the
instructor an opportunity to review the work submitted and consider
possible assessments. Each student group would then be assigned a
different live chat time in one of the remaining days of the week.
During each group's time, the instructor could select one or
several students to engage in a live Socratic exchange, while other
students observe and enter into the discussion when called upon or
through previously agreed upon netiquette[ 98 ]. The live chat
offers a degree of immediacy and 'thinking on one's feet' in a
public forum that is such a critical part of the legal education
experience found in residential programs. The exchange further
helps build critical writing and organizational skills as students
are required to respond articulately and concisely to detailed
questioning from the instructor in rapid fire succession. A live
teleconferencing version can easily be used within the course
management platform to enhance the sense of co-presence and
immediacy, and a more sophisticated video conferencing option is
possible for those who desire an even greater approximation of the
residential experience[ 99 ]. Several follow-up questions could be posted by the
instructor following the live exchange. A similar virtual
case-briefing option is available in the group mode[ 100 ].
In using the case brief format,
instructors should alternate the individual mode with the group
mode, as well as synchronous and asynchronous versions, to provide
a variety of learning experiences that are consistent with notions
of quality assessment discussed earlier[ 101 ]. An
asynchronous version of the case brief format might simply direct
students to post briefs and discuss the cases with other students
under the professor's facilitation in assigned discussion rooms.
The professor would then follow-up in a Socratic manner in the way
described above. This type of asynchronous exchange not only
benefits non-aural learners and increases overall participation
among students[ 102 ], but encourages the development of critical thinking
skills as students analyze other student posts and replies, compare
and contrast answers, reflect on the deeper reasoning behind the
law, and develop and organize their thoughts as part of their own
replies. Student thought processes can then be examined in greater
detail by instructors than possible in the traditional classroom
(oral briefing) setting ( Ahern and Repman, 1994 ). Instructors, in turn, can give greater feedback and
correction to faulty reasoning[ 103 ]. Alan Smith
(Central Queensland University) and Michael Walpole (University of
New South Wales) ( 1998 ) support this notion in their use of 'critical,
reflective and problem-solving questions' in their Australian
Taxation Studies Program study guides to engage students at deeper
levels. In this sense, effective online discussion (and
facilitation) can counter the idea expressed by some that only
personal, face-to-face contact can promote 'deep' learning
( Jones and Scully,
1996 , 1998 ).
As an added bonus, instructors
using the asynchronous mode can respond directly to the questions
and address the special needs of particular groups without wasting
the time of other groups not affected by the situation
( McComb,
1994 ). More practically, asynchronous
exchanges accommodate students in an online class who find it
difficult to meet synchronously because of work or time zone
conflicts. Such flexibility may allow law students to pursue
internships or externships or work in clinics without conflicting
with any regularly scheduled classes[ 104 ]. Also, small
groups of students who prefer working independently can do so while
still having access to the instructor for comment and feedback
( McComb,
1994 , p.165).
Co-counsel . Co-counsel is a form of guided design. Guided design
is particularly well suited to encouraging interaction in small
groups. This strategy focuses on 'developing the learners'
decision-making skills as well as on teaching specific concepts and
principles ( Kemp et al, 1994 ,
p.150). E-learners work to solve open-ended problems that require
outside class work to gather information and do research on a
particular area of law. This format will encourage law students to
'think logically, communicate ideas, and apply steps in a
decision-making process' ( Ibid , p.151), all
of which are essential to effective legal practice ( Friedland,
1996 , p.27).
Learners in this group format are
not only required to apply the information they have learned but
must, in the process, exchange ideas and reflect on suggested
solutions collaboratively. The instructor's role is to act as a
consultant to the group as called upon. Regular meetings much like
a consulting/senior partner might have with his or her junior
attorney can be scheduled asynchronously or synchronously and used
in conjunction with ongoing group discussion. If the presenting
problem is given in the first part of the semester and is turned in
at the end, it can provide a myriad of formative and summative
performance-based assessment opportunities.
Opposing Parties . Opposing Parties is a form of role playing involving
dramatization by group participants of a 'situation relating to a
problem,' whereby each participant 'acts out a role as he or she
feels it would be played in real life' ( Kemp et al, 1994 , pp.150-151). Role plays are effective learning
activities in the virtual classroom that support analytical
reasoning and prolonged reflection ( Anderson T,
1999 ). The role-playing method
dominates skills courses taught in law school ( Friedland,
1996 , p.27), and has more frequently
been adopted in a variety of instructional settings in first,
second and third year courses ( Sheppard,
1997 , p.632). The role-play is further
attractive to legal educators for its adaptability to a variety of
class sizes and types and for its ability to help students 'think
like lawyers'[ 105 ].
In the individual mode, after
reading assigned cases, students would take on a specific role as
plaintiff, defendant, witness, or in some cases that of the judge,
much like they would in the typical mock trial scenario (see,
e.g; Sheppard, 1997 , p.632). Faculty might then play the role of the judge
or opposing attorney, asking questions or presenting arguments that
each individual in the group must respond to. Faculty may also call
on outside experts within the practising legal community to play
the judge or opposing attorney. Faculty would then engage students
in several levels of question and answer. If the group mode were
preferred, for instance, in a class of 20 with four groups of five
students each, two groups can play the role of plaintiff, two
groups the role of defendant, and the instructor functions as the
judge. If used throughout the semester in the asynchronous mode,
during one week the plaintiff groups may be required to post their
case briefs and each defendant group would be assigned to a
particular plaintiff group to argue the defendant's case.
Synchronous components involving a plaintiff's group and a
defendant's group in the form of a pre-trial conference or hearing
under the faculty's supervision could also be incorporated[
106 ]. Role-playing
in this manner helps promote 'an understanding of other persons'
positions and their attitudes as well as the procedures that might
be used for diagnosing and solving problems' ( Kemp et al,
1994 , p.151). Role-playing as just
described also has the advantage of helping law students simulate,
under the instructor's strict supervision, real-life work
scenarios. Role-playing can therefore assist learners in getting a
fuller and richer understanding of a real-life legal situation, for
example, a pre-trial hearing ( Friedland, 1996 , p.27). This is the type of contextual interaction
lauded by reflectionists, who emphasize a setting where students
learn from the environment itself (via observation), through active
interaction with those in the environment (via participation), and
through reflection upon the aforementioned contextual interaction
( Moon,
1999 ).
'Legal Eagles': Legal Eagles is a type of game format in which two or
more groups actually compete in an attempt to meet a certain set of
objectives ( Kemp et al, 1994 ).
Unlike the role-play described above where groups engage in
in-depth debate over particular issues of a case or assume
particular roles for the sake of understanding, in the games format
the groups are actually competing for a stated outcome. Much like a
real-life court experience, the game is organized under a clear and
concise set of rules and procedures, and information is provided
that requires decision making and usually follow-up actions. It is
especially well-suited for the mock trial type of experience
described under the role play. Each week of the semester could
focus on a different aspect of the trial procedure, from the brief
to the pre-trial hearing to opening statements and even
cross-examination. Students could be graded on their work at the
end of each phase or could receive a final grade at the end of the
semester. At the end of the exercise, the facilitator, as judge,
could render a 'verdict,' declaring one or more groups the
'winner.' Another scenario might involve a negotiation where
students are given a set of facts, desired outcomes and time-frame
in which to reach a decision. The team that gets the most out of
the negotiation in the shortest period of time is declared winner.
This is patterned after the client-counselling and negotiation
boards found in most residential law programs[ 107 ]. At the
University of Arizona, video conferencing has been used to link
students from two sites who then engage in a live video negotiation
as competing law firms ( Boyd, 1998 ). In any
case, whether in the asynchronous, synchronous, or e-learning
format, the game should be a typical, real-life situation that an
attorney might face in the day-to-day practice of law.
An example of the games format in
the international legal setting is seen in the development of the
Saarlandes based conferencing program ( Herberger et al,
1998 ). Such programs allow role-plays
and other real-world legal simulations to be carried out using
multiple modes of asynchronous and synchronous delivery. Professor
Abdul Paliwala, University of Warwick, describes the incorporation
of conferencing with traditional teaching methods in a single
course ( Paliwala, 2001 , see also, Bloxham, 1998 ).
The Common Law I course at
Lancaster is particularly significant in that a large course of
over 150 students is involved. Students are organised into teams of
lawyer who negotiate contract cases on behalf of clients. There is
a public space for instructions, advice and communication from
course teachers. There are confidential spaces for negotiation
within a team and between teams. The exercise is more than simple
role-play. Students research the law using traditional and
electronic methods and learn through group work.
Glasgow Caledonian and Strathclyde
Universities experimented with a version of the 'Delict Game' that
allowed for similar collaborative, interactive real-life legal
scenarios to be played out by students and instructors (for
example, see Blackie, 1998 and Blackie and Maharg,
1998 ). Robin Widdison predicts the
'beginnings of a cottage industry in computer based simulation
games for law teaching' that is sure to change the available
options just described ( Widdison, 1999 ). More sophisticated, two-person dialogical
(artificial intelligence) model games, for example, DiaLaw
(computer-mediated legal argument), where both students make moves
in response to legal scenarios, have also been developed by
international legal educators ( Lodder and Verheij,
1999 , see also, Bench-Capon and
Stanford, 1998 ).
The discussion formats (1-4) just
described should be used together to provide a variety of learning
experiences for law students throughout the semester. Instructors
can assess discussion formatively - as it is assessed in the
residential law classroom through oral case briefing - or
summatively in one of the ways described above. It is important
that law professors become familiar with specific discursive styles
or patterns of learners beforehand so they can avoid unfairly
assessing students' discussion[ 108 ]. Some styles
tend to be 'dominant,' condescending, or terse in tone, which tend
to discourage others from participating ( Herring,
1996 , pp.115-145), and women tend to
emphasize relationships and collegial interaction in an empathic
environment whereas men prefer debate-styles of interaction that is
more competitive[ 109 ]. Instructors should avoid setting up discussion
assessment criteria or using grading rubrics that favour one style
over the other[ 110 ]. Criteria should instead be related to course
objectives and professional development. Cultural factors may
similarly influence communication styles or patterns in online
discussion[ 111 ].
Facilitators must not only watch
the discursive style of students, but their own styles as
well[ 112 ].
Online learners desire both relational and personal interaction and
a learning environment that welcomes alternative or opposing views
( Blum,
1999 ). Facilitators must observe their
own tone, or ' voice,' in their responses to make sure that they
don't 'shut down' or 'silence' opportunities for debate by
eliminating alternative ways of viewing the issues at hand. At the
same time, instructors must avoid unchecked tolerance or control by
those with more dominant discursive styles. Creating a positive,
supportive online communication environment can benefit all
learners while promoting gender and cultural equality in course
discussions[ 113 ]. Frequency of interaction also plays a role in
contributing to supportive communication climates[ 114 ]. The
'attentiveness' of the facilitator must be clearly demonstrated
(Oakshott, 1989). Fairhurst correctly observes, however,
that:
'once students have familiarised
themselves with using the discussion boards and chat rooms, the
tutor's presence could be less dominant ... bearing in mind...it
might be preferable, on pedagogical grounds, for the tutor to be
involved in the dialogue at all times' ( Fairhurst,
2000 ).
Before turning to the next
instructional strategy, it is important to briefly note that
discussion, as presented in the four basic formats above, can also
be used to teach professionalism, instil values, and train students
to be ethical lawyers[ 115 ]. Some critics
argue that faculty models of professionalism, which are the best
way to transmit values[ 116 ], can only
occur in the intimacy of a face-to-face setting, where faculty
can:
recount stories of good lawyering
or provide examples of professionalism and values through their
actions. In the classroom, hallway, or clinical setting, the
stories are real and meaningful to students because the people are
real and meaningful. Students connect to the message because they
connect to the messenger... . Unless the speaker is extremely
charismatic and motivational, it is unlikely that students will
identify with a depersonalized speaker on the web... . If they
don't connect to the messenger, they won't connect to the message
( Johnson, 2001b ).
As previously discussed,
internet-based learners are connected learners whose learning must
occur in an interactive, collaborative setting to be effective.
Relationships in cyberspace are indeed real and meaningful,
intimate and personal, as evidenced by the literature[ 117 ]. Connection
with faculty through intentional communal-building activities can
provide the requisite social context for professional modelling.
Faculty can model professional and ethical communication behaviour
as they interact and respond to student questions and answer them
in a respectful tone and in a timely manner. The recounting of
stories and the discussion of ethical communication behaviour
occurs easily in textual exchanges and may offer opportunities for
greater reflection and response from students if threaded
discussions are used. In some ways, it may be:
'easier to discuss values and
personal concerns in writing than orally, since inadvertent or
ambiguous non-verbal signals are not so dominant' ( Fairhurst,
2000 ).
Moreover, as part of asynchronous
or synchronous discussion, instructors can incorporate established
models for cognitive moral development[ 118 ]. For example,
Kohlberg's model is especially appropriate in the legal education
setting since it advocates an approach:
'in which the teacher Socratically
elicits conflicting student views on a moral issue or dilemma'
( Kohlberg, 1976 ,
p.20).
In the process of exchange,
t he instructor first identifies the
learner's current level of moral development and then presents a
moral or ethical dilemma that encourages students to discuss
conflicting moral and ethical views. Kohlberg says that the goal is
to help take the learner's level of moral reasoning to a higher
level. Professional Responsibility/Ethics courses could use
Kohlberg's model to develop the relevant canons and rules of
professional conduct in the legal profession beyond mere
recognition and comprehension.
3.3.3 Case
Study/Analysis
As with the other methods described
above, the case study can be carried out with learners working
independently or in small groups. The case study is a method that
meets the criteria of good adult education and good online
education in that it draws on past experiences of the learners and
is participatory ( Marsick, 1990 ,
p.225). The case study is similar to the 'problem books' and the
'problem method' of legal instruction that is currently used by
many law professors in place of the Socratic method and
casebooks[ 119 ]. The problem method first appeared in law schools in
the early 1930s and was based on the case study method used in
graduate business schools ( Sheppard, 1997 , p.625-627).
The key to a successful case study
is the selection of the 'right problem situation' that is relevant
'both to the interests and experience level of learners and to the
concepts being taught' ( Marsick, 1990 ,
p.227). The case report given to students should include basic
facts about the problem or situation, with relevant information
related to the key characters and environmental context. To build
in real-world elements, instructors could write the case along the
lines of attorney notes taken during a client interview. Cases with
a 'dramatic effect' should be constructed[ 120 ], and should
include opinions[ 121 ] and views of the people involved on top of the basic
facts. In this way, students can then get practice at deciphering
facts from opinions. Well-written cases can combine issues and
rules of law from several cases and be excellent mid-semester or
end-of-semester summative tools similar to the traditional essay
exam format used in residential programs. Student could be required
to prepare a report following the IRAC formula or memo format. A
'model answer' or analysis of the case could be provided to
learners after they have reached their own conclusions.
If the group mode is preferred,
individual groups should have a chance to 'brainstorm their
perceptions of the case before requiring planned discussion with
the instructor' ( Marsick, 1990 ,
p.228). Individual group discussion fora that promote group work
and community can easily be set up in advance using one of the
web-based course management educational platforms mentioned
earlier[ 122 ]. Marsick encourages instructors to probe and dig for
underlying assumptions using the Socratic method instructor'
( Marsick, 1990 ,
p.228), which further makes the case analysis/study a natural fit
for online legal educators. A key advantage of using the Socratic
method as part of this strategy is that it emphasizes the kind of
practical thinking ( Ibid , p.239)
that lawyers must display when practising law. Just like the
real-life practice of law, learners are required to make decisions
'under time pressure with an inadequate stock of information'
( Ibid ). Since the
case analysis follows the Socratic method it encourages applying
principles identified in the cases to new situations in the same
way students would be required to address application in
hypothetical situations as part of the oral case briefing
exchange.
Case studies can be posted to web
pages or course sites and discussed through a combination of
asynchronous or synchronous modes. Instructors teaching different
sections of Torts, for example, can collaborate on the construction
of cases and share results with other sections. Interactive links
can be embedded within the cases that provide relevant background
or technical information, diagrams, staged interviews, and the
like[ 123 ]. If
prepared well in advance, case studies can be 'burned' onto CD-Roms
and mailed to students during registration. Multi-media components
can be incorporated with little technical training in the same way
they are incorporated into lectures. A live version of the case
could be presented using RealAudio, for example, that more closely
resembles the actual face-to-face client interview that attorneys
regularly conduct. Individual groups could then pose follow-up
questions and engage the 'client' live. Meanwhile, students can
receive feedback and be trained in the 'how-to's' of conducting
client interviews, client counselling and case planning - all
valuable legal skills cultivated by law schools ( Friedland,
1996 , p.27). Note that many of IOLIS'
workbooks include exercises involving hypothetical cases where
students are presented with legal problems that require interactive
learning in an integrated fashion as described above.
3.3.4 Project Method
Many of the instructional
strategies discussed thus far fall within the realm of the project
method. Group projects can include role-playing, case
study/analysis, simulations, problem solving exercises, debates,
discussion, and brainstorming (see Brookfield, 1990 , Gilley, 1990 ,
pp.261-281, Marsick, 1990 , Paulsen, 1995 ,
and Rogers, 1969 ).
Projects may also be designed for the individual student[ 124 ].
Projects should grow out of the
normal course of training being carried on in a course
( Knowles, 1970 , p.45). When properly conducted they can give students
opportunities to pursue their special interests. Projects enable
students to get practical experience in their chosen profession or
field of study and gain a sense of competency[ 125 ].
Good projects contain two essential
components. First, they require 'a question or problem that
organizes and drives activities,' and second, they require
activities that result in a 'series of products that culminate in a
final product that addresses the driving question' ( Good and Brophy,
1994 , p.233). For example, the
presenting problem in a criminal law course may be a client who is
arrested on suspicion of selling cocaine. This problem could then
drive a series of learning activities throughout the semester,
which are treated either formatively or summatively. The first
product might be a five page brief in memo form detailing the facts
of the case, potential issues and probable defence, which is due at
the end of week three. Students must receive a 'pass' from the
instructor before proceeding to the next phase of the project. By
week five, students may be required to respond to a motion to
suppress evidence on 4th Amendment grounds, where they get the
chance to demonstrate their mastery of relevant case law being
discussed in readings. At the end of week nine students may be
required to prepare opening statements, questions for
cross-examination, or closing arguments. In this way, students are
dealing with substantive law as well as relevant rules of evidence
and procedure. They also have the opportunity to build skills
necessary for practising law, such as writing legal briefs,
analyzing cases, drafting motions, responding to filing deadlines,
preparing a case, and questioning witnesses[ 126 ]. Using the
project method in online learning can thus help to integrate
learning into the larger legal community in a meaningful
way[ 127 ].
Hardy described another version of the project method where a group
of 14 students was directed to draft an 'ideal' constitution for
Dalmatia, a fictitious country. Students collaborated via email
discussion only throughout the entire semester to complete their
negotiations. Their final draft of the document was submitted
electronically ( Hardy, 1994 ).
Additionally, it is important that
the project, whether in group or individual mode, be shared with
others for feedback and critique at each phase prior to final
critique by the facilitator at the end of the semester. This
exchange injects diverse viewpoints and helps learners 'reflect on
and extend their emergent knowledge and to revise their products if
necessary' ( Marsick, 1990 ,
p.233). Evaluation and critique standards in the form of 'grading
rubrics' can benefit learners by providing organized, specific
feedback. The Internet can be used to provide students with an even
broader range of feedback from legal experts or interested peers at
other law schools who access the final product through a group
project web page or by entering the virtual classroom as guests
(see Foshay, 1999 ).
A variation of the project method
that further exemplifies the constructivist paradigm at work in
online education is the 'legal expert system' developed by Richard
Wright at the Chicago Kent College of Law.
Expert system tools which permit
(require) the students themselves to build models of specific areas
of law fuse and integrate the specific and the general, the
practical and the theoretical, efficiently using the most effective
pedagogical technique: learning by doing. The modelling process not
only facilitates understanding of the conceptual content and
organization of the particular area of law, but also makes concrete
and practical the usually abstract and sterile debates on the theme
of law and legal reasoning ( Wright, 1998 ).
For example, a student might
develop an 'expert system' for copyright infringement litigation.
This system would include the necessary forms for bringing such
litigation based on the formal rules of copyright law. This
exercise would not only help the student better understand the
substantive law involved but it would also require awareness of the
larger legal context - namely, how the computerized system was
received by the client and other support staff, whether it was
user-friendly, and so forth. Designing the program might require
co-operation with a computer company and a firm specializing in
copyright law. It might require (qualitative) field research (e.g;
in-depth interviews or focus groups with lawyers, judges, law
professors and practitioners) as well as (quantitative) survey
research (e.g; a survey sent to local copyright lawyers). The
student would thus be required to explore not only the rules of law
but the nature of legal work in the designated area.
3.3.5 Panel, Symposium
Internet-based educational delivery
provides an ideal environment for the types of information
exchanged in the instructional strategy known as the forum.
Asynchronous and synchronous modes easily accommodate the asking
and answering of multiple questions. Speakers, experts and guest
moderators can participate without having to travel or be available
at a particular time. When properly administered, the forum
conducted in the online setting can be more convenient, more
thorough and at times more effective than when used in the
traditional classroom environment. Several law schools have
successfully experimented with the forum as part of their
internet-based delivery (see, e.g; Johnson,
2001a and Martin 1998 ).
A forum is defined as an 'open
discussion carried on by one or more resource persons and an entire
group' ( Sisco, 1990 ,
p.285). The instructor usually functions as the moderator, although
he may participate in the forum and assign an outside moderator.
The moderator is responsible for guiding or facilitating discussion
among forum participants while the class, as 'audience,'
participates by asking questions of the resource persons. There are
at least two basic variations of the forum: the panel and the
symposium.
The panel is 'a small group of
three to six persons, who sit around a table in the presence of an
audience and have a purposeful conversation on a topic in which
they have specialized knowledge' ( Sisco, 1990 , p.285). The panel is guided by a moderator but does
not allow for any participation. In a constitutional law course,
for example, constitutional law practitioners, or law professors at
other law schools teaching constitutional law, could discuss the
constitutionality of a flag-burning amendment. In the asynchronous
mode, the instructor could create a discussion folder for dialogue
among panellists and pose the key questions for debate. Students
would be required to merely observe the dialogue between panel
participants as the instructor moderates discussion. Then,
following the panel discussion the student would be required to
write a summary of the key issues discussed by the panellists,
create a pool of potential follow-up questions, or participate in a
threaded discussion within his own discussion group. A simulated
video discussion provides a variation of the panel discussion just
described. Migdal and Cartwright ( 1997 , 1998 ) describe the use of a simulated video discussion
between House of Lords judges in Donoghue v. Stevenson. Such
simulations (consistent with the e-learning model proposed
throughout) may even include interactive, small group discussion
related to the video between faculty and students to strengthen the
feedback loop.
The second type of forum is the
symposium, which is a 'series of presentations given by two to five
persons of notable authority and competence on different aspects of
the same theme or closely related themes' ( Migdal and Cartwright,
1997 , 1998 ). It is very similar to the panel, but somewhat more
formal in nature. Questions from the audience are encouraged
following the presentations. The instructor may then provide a
response to the presentations, much in the same way a respondent in
the colloquia format might respond. An e-learning mode of this
format might include a posted lecture by each presenter followed by
a live chat, or a live video lecture followed by a week's long
threaded discussion (for instance, see Paliwala,
2001 ). At the end of the week the
instructor might provide a summary of key issues and invite
presenters to post rebuttal or concluding remarks. The symposium
(and the panel) have the advantage of giving learners exposure to a
variety of experts' viewpoints and offers an 'opportunity for
audience members to clarify points made by the speakers'
( Sisco,
1990 , p.289). Variations of the
symposium include the Delphi Technique, Brainstorming, and
Synectics[ 128 ].
Coventry University's IOLISplus
project provides a more sophisticated, pre-packaged pedagogical
variation of the panel discussion format.
[In] Ken Oliphant's workbook on the
Reform of Tort Law, students are presented with three stereotypes -
Dollar Bill Baily (a US ambulance chasing plaintiff trial lawyer),
Fleur Powers (an New Zealand former public servant and law lecturer
turned law reformer who is a firm believer in the accident
compensation scheme), and Artemis Wellmeadow (An English University
academic who may be described as a pragmatic realist or a blinkered
and crusty reactionary (according to your point of view) and
steeped in the textbook tradition of writers such as Percy Winfield
and Sir John Salmond). There follows a round table discussion in
which the three stereotypes are asked a series of questions on
issues relating to the nature, purpose and reform of Tort law. The
students are expected to develop their own perspective in relation
to these questions and can refer to textual information
illustrating theories such as the Deterrence theory, the Corrective
Justice theory, Critical Legal Studies, Feminist theory, Atiyah's
critique of the Fault principle and Jane Stapleton's Disease and
Compensation debate. They then 'interact' with the pane by clicking
to find out the response of each member of the panel. The result
should be a reflecting comparison of the students' own positions
with that of the stereotypes ( Paliwala, 2001 ).
It is possible for such exercises
to then 'converge' with synchronous or asynchronous discussion
formats, or live video conferencing for more immediate feedback and
follow-up explanation.
3.3.6 Apprenticeship (Mentorships,
Externships, Clinics)
Historically, practising attorneys
have played a critical role in training young apprentices
( Silecchia, 1996 ). Externships and clinical programs have been used
alongside apprenticeships to provide valuable contextual learning
experiences (see, Bloch, 1982 , Baker, 1994 ).
As mentors, attorneys operate as guides, rather than providers of
knowledge, who introduce students to:
'the new (legal) world,
interpreting it for them, and helping them to learn what they need
to know to flourish in it [as attorneys]' ( Parks Daloz,
1990 , p.207).
Mentors empower students by
'helping to draw out and give form to what their students already
know' ( Ibid ,
p.206). The aim of mentorship is to promote the 'development of the
learner' ( Ibid , p,206)
through modelling and challenging students in a supportive
environment.
A major benefit to mentorship in
the online legal environment is the opportunity for on-campus
learners to engage in frequent, convenient communication with legal
practitioners in the field. Weekly or daily communications, and in
some cases journals, can be shared with mentors using the virtual
classroom, regular email, or phone calls. Separate web pages can be
set up for each mentor, who may be involved with more than one
student at a time. This valuable dialogue creates numerous
opportunities for timely feedback on student questions and
projects. Students can listen in on conference calls with clients
of the mentor, help conduct research or answer questions arising
out of such interviews, prepare documents for trial, work on
briefs, and so forth, at a distance. As such, online mentorships
have the advantage of creating opportunities for real-world
research and writing projects for students unable to leave campus
for whatever reason. Key professional values can be fostered using
Kohlberg's cognitive/moral development model[ 129 ] or through
real-time conversations.
Using online delivery in law
schools can further enhance opportunities for student externships
or clinical programs[ 130 ]. For example, students can take part in legal
externships near campus or at some distance from the law school
campus and do not have to wait until their summers off to gain
working experience in a law office. Classes can be delivered online
to externs that will free up time for travel. Students have the
opportunity then to work side-by-side with practising attorneys who
can teach both values and skills using a face-to-face model.
Employers also appreciate having students available year-round
( Hot Wiring Legal Ed,
2000 , p.7). Upon graduation, students
will have more actual working experience, which may help make the
difference when it comes to competing for jobs. Northeastern School
of Law has experimented with such co-ops at large firms, state and
federal courts, government agencies, and non-profit organizations
( Ibid ).
As for clinics, students can take
classes in the online setting that may otherwise conflict with
their participation. In the past, clinical training opportunities
have been limited by interference with regularly scheduled class
hours ( Rhode, 2001 ,
p.B-15). Expanded opportunities for participation in clinics will
increase chances for faculty- student and student-student
collaboration, ethical analysis of real-world legal problems,
advocacy, counselling, fact investigation, and case
planning[ 131 ].
Additionally, on-campus clinics are
expensive. Thus, even though online supplements or enhancements to
traditional (on-campus) clinical programs as described above may be
viable options, communications and information technology
(C&IT) based clinical simulations may be more efficient in
terms of pedagogy and more cost effective over the long haul.
Harvard University's Pericles project provides some early evidence
of this impact on efficiency, as does the University of Warwick's
Legal Practice Office[ 132 ]. Instructors
of simulated clinical programs can develop the necessary reflective
component of clinical learning by using 'case conferences'
( Paliwala, 2001 ).
Used in the ways described above,
apprenticeships and online course delivery can create more
opportunities for skills training and better prepare students in
areas where they have proven woefully unprepared in the past
( Uphoff,
et al, 1997 , p.381). As Gerald Lopez,
University of California law professor, observes:
'law school is 'still almost
entirely about law and ... only incidentally and superficially
about lawyering'' ( Rhode, 2001 ,
p.B-15).
Careful planning and supervision in
the online setting can help overcome many of the weaknesses
traditionally associated with apprenticeships ( Baker,
1994 , pp.287, 293, see also,
Bailey,
1998 ). More important, perhaps, such
strategies as described herein, consistent with Laurillard's admonition, enable academics
to:
'address both the direct experience
of the world, and the reflection on that experience that will
produce the intended way of representing it' ( Laurillard,1993 , p.28).
4.
Conclusion: Bringing it all Together and Planning for the
Future
Effective online course design for
legal educators begins by asking and answering the same key
questions one would ask in the traditional setting; namely, what
are the critical learning goals and objectives for this course? In
the law school setting this includes, in addition to building
knowledge and understanding of substantive law, the development of
critical and analytical reasoning, professional values and ethics,
and other basic lawyering skills necessary for the practice of law.
It also includes learning that takes place in the appropriate
social/communal environs. Then and only then can one determine
which instructional strategies and learning activities identified
above should be used.
The power of Internet-based
education resides in the medium's capacity to support multiple
modes of communication - asynchronous and synchronous, between 'any
combination of student-to-student, student-to-faculty,
faculty-to-student, faculty-to-faculty, student-to-others, and
others-to-students...' ( Ellsworth, 1995 , p.31).
Effective planning and design in
the online learning environment will let law professors and law
students exchange ideas and work together on learning activities
around the clock from anywhere in the world ( Hiltz,
1994 ). Such interactions are wholly
consistent with the American Bar Association's principles for
delivering quality distance education, and further enable law
faculty to accommodate a variety of learning styles and provide
opportunities for both self-directed and collaborative
learning.
The many successes and experiments
in the international setting described herein should be carefully
considered as American law schools more fully embrace the online
legal education experience. The early adopters on the international
scene support the idea that embracing technology in the law school
setting does not necessarily mean a reduction in critical thinking,
rigor, or communal association among students. If properly
constructed, learning activities online can be rigorous and
designed to achieve the same learning goals present in residential
programs. Contrary to the opinions of some legal educators, online
courses do not automatically breed isolation or reduce
opportunities for group learning (see Warner, et al, 1998 , pp.107,109,164). Since most law students, according
to some critics, leave American law schools unprepared to practice
law ( Uphoff, et al, 1997 , p.381), searching for additional instructional
strategies or modes of delivery - whether online or in the
residential setting, becomes a valuable educational
endeavor.
Moreover, video and audio
conferencing should not be viewed as the only online tools for the
21st century American law school. As discussed throughout, these
tools often require more time and resources than most schools can
spare. For many of the same reasons, neither should the development
of self-contained, CD-Rom driven platforms, along the lines of
IOLIS, be considered the only option for subject matter delivery.
Waiting for the resources to develop such projects may mean that a
school never ventures into the realm of online delivery of legal
education.
Instead, convergence (what the
author here has presented as 'e-learning'), through a combination
of traditional computer assisted learning tools and computer
mediated communications - where educational technologies do not
operate independently of one another but in concert - is the
preferred direction of online legal education (see Widdison,
1999 , Moodie, 1997 ). Skilful and creative facilitation of asynchronous
and synchronous discussion formats (using one of the popular course
management platforms) can be introduced into the curriculum with
little expense or hassle. The video and audio components can be
added to the pedagogical mix as the program developers and
administrators evaluate and assess the effect of online
implementation on the institution's infrastructure. Online delivery
training can help instructors model the Socratic dialogue in their
discussion fora and build students' reflective, critical thinking
skills. In this light, with the proper amount of planning and
commitment, computer assisted, web interactive learning may very
well enable students to learn more 'efficiently and proficiently
than ever before' ( Thomas D A, 2001 ) possible in the history of American legal
education.
Law schools must not become silent
partners with tradition and the 'legal luddites' in depriving
students of approaches to learning the law that may be more
effective than current methods. While internet-based delivery of
legal education is not a panacea for the bevy of problems
associated with current law school delivery methods (see, for
example, Laurillard, 1993 ), when combined with summer residencies along the
cohort model - which affords further opportunities for building
values and teaching skills in the face-to-face setting[ 133 ]
-computer-mediated communication (CMC) extends the legal educator's
delivery arsenal in positive ways. If designed and delivered in
accord with the strategies and modes listed herein, CMC and legal
education seem like anything but 'strange bedfellows'[ 134 ].
Some are concerned that the
transition to an 'electronic global legal culture' - that is, a
legal culture where students anywhere around the world can receive
a quality education, may lead to what Paliwala refers to as the
'wholesale McDonaldisation of legal education' ( Paliwala,
2001 , see also Ritzer,
1993 ). The economic benefits of online
legal education for law schools and law students are significant
and can not be overshadowed by such inflammatory rhetoric. The cost
of educating students will undoubtedly decrease as law schools tap
into a consortium of law faculty offering specific courses using
asynchronous, synchronous, or e-learning models[ 135 ]. This greatly
increases the number of students any one law school can reach (see
e.g; Leskovac, 1998 ,
pp.305-306, Warner et al, 1998 , p.164). Students benefit as well. For instance, the
cost of attending the law program at Concord University over four
years is about the same as one year's tuition at most private law
schools[ 136 ]. Internet-based legal education simply can not be
ignored by law schools given its ability to provide low-cost,
quality legal education to larger and more diverse groups of
learners than ever-before imagined possible in the traditional
residential setting[ 137 ]. As an extension to the notion of greater inclusion,
students in cyber classrooms can communicate with students at other
law schools from diverse socio-economic and cultural backgrounds,
thus interjecting a greater degree of diversity into the overall
legal education experience.
Future systematic research into the
effectiveness of the instructional strategies listed herein is
critical if faculty desire to progress toward 'best practices' that
satisfy the objectives and rigors of traditional residential
programs. While some research into online legal education exists,
it has been limited in several respects. It has remained mainly
anecdotal, has reflected individual university agendas, and has
been limited to investigations into cost effectiveness and
'user-friendliness' of delivery programs[ 138 ]. Naturalistic
case study research designs ( Yin, 1993 ) that draw
on both quantitative and qualitative methods ( Tashakkori and
Teddlie, 1998 ), seem especially
appropriate given the current scene in internet-based legal
education. Delivery of internet-based law courses is only a little
over four years old, and only a handful of accredited law schools
are engaged in 'experimentation'. Furthermore, these schools use
different models of delivery and offer very few courses each year.
This means that comparison across units along a large number of
variables both within and between institutional settings is
unlikely at this stage.
Case studies and other forms of
'action research' ( Carr and Kemmis,
1986 ) are well-suited for gaining
insight and understanding into areas like online legal education
where little systematic research has been conducted[ 139 ]. The purpose
of case research is to take an intensive, in-depth look at an
individual group, institution or community ( Isaac and Michael,
1995 , p.52). Because case studies are
so intensive and rely upon both empirical and ethnographic data
they can illuminate important variables and processes involved in
online legal education that are presently unknown and worthy of
more extensive investigation. As such, they are useful for planning
or designing larger investigations, for example, longitudinal
studies - as programs develop and can further assist in building a
body of literature consistent with the ABA's desire to gather
information on quality online legal education for ultimate
incorporation into the Standards ( ABA Memorandum,
1997 ).
The first step in case study
research is to state the objectives, which in turn determine the
types of data sought. Some key questions governing research at this
stage might include: which online instructional strategy or
combination of strategies currently available will most positively
enhance student performance in law courses along a series of
predetermined measurements? Are some online strategies more
effective in building analytical reasoning, developing key
professional values, or teaching professional skills? What is the
level of student satisfaction in online courses as compared to
residential courses?[ 140 ] Are online strategies more effective than traditional
on-campus methods when it comes to achieving similar learning
objectives?[ 141 ] Are online law students in first, second and third
year courses performing as well or better than their colleagues in
the same courses offered in the residential format? Are
asynchronous or synchronous modes more effective in achieving
stated outcomes? Lastly, is there a statistically significant
difference between students who take law courses online and those
who do not when it comes to bar passage rates?
To help address such questions, in
addition to using e-mail surveys[ 142 ] and various
qualitative data collection procedures[ 143 ], certain
experimental designs should be considered. For example, a
randomized groups, post-test only design ( Isaac and Michael,
1995 , p.95) can be used to determine
which instructional strategy is more effective in achieving
specific learner outcomes, or which strategy best builds specific
lawyer skills or professional values[ 144 ]. Using a
randomized pre-test/post-test design ( Isaac and Michael,
1995 , p.95) adds a control group to
the mix and enables educators to better assess the effectiveness of
a particular instructional strategy[ 145 ]. Similar
designs may be used to compare individual students' experiences in
a residential course one semester and an online course the
following semester.
Only when research of the kind
suggested above is undertaken can legal educators determine the
rate or pace at which online efforts should be integrated into
current residential programs[ 146 ]. Such
research will also undoubtedly help determine which subjects during
which year - 1L, 2L, 3L - are most suitable for adaptation and
testing. Until such research is conducted, administrators and
professors in American law schools may be operating upon
preconceptions or assumptions about the efficacy of online learning
in the legal setting that may or may not be supported in actual
practice. Systematic research that addresses the questions
presented in the paragraph above can help administrators and
faculty at law schools determine whether the internet-based legal
education can truly meet the key educational objectives embedded
within the residential law school experience.
Acknowledgements
Professor Woods would like to thank
Jeffrey A Brauch, Professor and Dean of the Regent University
School of Law, Virginia Beach, Virginia, Tom Diggs, Director of
Regent University Law School's Online LL.M, Doug Cook, Professor
and Associate Dean of Academics, Regent University School of Law,
and Craig Stern, Professor, Regent University School of Law, for
their review of earlier drafts of this manuscript. Additional
thanks to Rebekah Woods, Dean of Students, Regent University School
of Law, and research assistant, Emily Taylor, Spring Arbor
University, for their help with proof-reading and formatting the
footnotes and reference sections during the final stages of
preparation.
When the research for this article
was first started, Dr. Woods was Dean of the School of Continuing
Education at Yellowstone Baptist College, Billings, Montana. He
would like to show his appreciation and thanks for the support he
received from Yellowstone during the research.
Footnotes and References
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