Footnotes
1. American Heritage Dictionary, 2000: Pedagogy: 1. The art or profession of teaching. 2. Preparatory training or instruction.
2. 'We recognize that economies of scale make Socratic and lecture models attractive, especially in large undergraduate and professional schools that cannot afford the teacher student ratios graduate departments typically enjoy' (Davis and Steinglass, 1997). Professor Davis (NYU School of Law) and Elizabeth Steinglass (Research Fellow at NYU School of Law and a doctoral student at the Harvard Graduate School of Education) participate in Workways, 'a multi-disciplinary collaboration designed to identify, analyze and develop the full range of intellectual capacities necessary to achieve excellence and social responsibility in the practice of law'. Davis and Steinglass cite Anthony G. Amsterdam, Jerome Bruner, David Richards, and Nancy Morawetz as the intellectual force behind the Lawyering Theory Colloquium of the New York University School of Law, thus I intend to follow up this Colloquium in my further research, see also, Hawkins-Leon, 1998. Hawkins-Leon states: '…critics of the method fear that it is more costly than the Socratic method because it is best utilized in classes of forty students or less', see also, Thiemann, 1998, recommending smaller class sizes.
3. Davis and Stienglass, 1997, at 251, (citing MacCrate, 1992 and Cramton, 1979, on urging law schools to place additional emphasis on various skills important to being a professional lawyer, such as teamwork and oral communication, and Frank, 1951 on criticizing traditional legal education for an excessive focus on case law and theory rather than on client interaction and the lower courts) argue that legal curricula should focus also on the humanities.
4. Thiemann, 1998, applying Guinier's methodology conducted in her three-year study of gender and the Socratic method at Pennsylvania University School of Law to New York University's School of Law and exploring complementary alternatives to the Socratic method, see also Hawkins-Leon, 1998, at 16.
5. The industry of education accounts for approximately 10 percent of the US GDP. In 2003, higher education is forecast to reach eleven billion dollars. See http://company.blackboard.com/index.cgi for information regarding online education market growth.
6. For example, The Journal of Information, Law & Technology (JILT) is solely delivered by Internet at http://www.law.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/
7. See http://imsproject.org/collaboration.html
8 . A multitude of MBA and other business programs are delivered using the Internet. Regarding law programs, the US has seen a rise in Internet delivery since 1998- Concord School of Law being the most mentioned example. Concord, accredited by the State of California, is an Internet, distance learning based law school.
9 . 'The monastic approach to learning for three years or more in the ivory tower was sustained by the geographical imperative of getting teachers and scholars together. In the age of the Internet, the positive aspects of physical commune do not disappear, but are reduced', (Paliwala, 1998).
10 . The term 'International Taxation' in the context of St. Thomas's Law School program (hereinafter the 'Program') does not refer solely to the examination of outbound and inbound transactions as the term is commonly used in traditional US tax degrees. Rather, the term refers to a non-national specific comparative study of the meshing of tax systems in order to provide a global perspective for multinational enterprise planning. For example, the program examines the causes, results, planning, and occurrence of the flow of the 50 percent of the world's monetary funds that pass through and are held in offshore jurisdictions such as Switzerland, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong, and Luxembourg.
11. For example, companies and firms include: Merrill Lynch, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte & Touche and Credit Suisse.
12. For example, the Program encourages a 'global' class for cross regional and national interaction. Thus, the Program regularly accepts students from Russia, China, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Africa, and numerous small island financial centers, among other locations at least a ten-hour flight time from the US. The air travel alone would cost more than $2,000 per trip to the University to attend lectures. As any program of substance should require a minimum of ten lectured courses for completion, the air travel expense at over $20,000 would cost more than tuition.
13. Johnson, 2000. Professor Dwight employed the Socratic method for his assessment of the students' understanding of his lectures at Columbia from the late 1850's until 1881 when he was removed to make way for a curriculum change to the Socratic-Case method, see also Sheppard, 1997 for an interesting review of the history of US legal education pedagogy.
14. See Davis and Steinglass, 1997 , at 261, see also Hawkins-Leon, 1998, at 4. For purposes of this article, references to the Socratic method approach include the correlative use of the Case Method, as applied by Langdell. The terms are generally used synonymously in legal education writing because the two methods are used hand-in-hand in practice. However, employing the Socratic method approach of questioning is not synonymous to using the Case Method. For example, a professor could employ a role-playing approach in combination with the use of cases.
15. Courses in the US are generally either two or three credit hours, referring to the number of class contact hours per week (a class hour is only 50 minutes). A course generally runs between twelve and fifteen weeks. Thus, a three-hour credit course may have 45 class lectures.
16. Oberst, 1996, quoting from Johnson, 2000, at 110: 'Whatever success I have in developing my students' analytical skills mainly results from my holding them accountable in class'.
17. Id; at 271; see also Thiemann, 1998, at 24 , offering further support in her study at NYU Law School.
18 . Id; referring to Cavers, 1943.
19. Donahoe, 2000, at para 62 (Professor Donahoe is an Associate Professor at Georgetown University Law Center.).
20. Thiemann, 1998, at 28, quoting her discussion with Professor Kate Silbaugh, Boston University School of Law.
21. Hawkins-Leon, 1998, at 9 (These aspects are verbatim and reference the findings presented in the Association of American Law Schools 1966 Proceedings Pt. 1, Report of the Committee on Teaching Methods, The Problem Method Survey and Appraisal.).
22. Kerper, 1998, at 367, see also Moskovitz, 1992. Professor Moskovitz, a professor at Golden Gate University School of Law, argues for totally replacing, in all courses, the case method and correspondingly the IRAC method with the Problem Solving Method.
23. Kerper, 1998, at 367-370. Kerper's Problem Solving method is presented by using the acronym: SOLVE, but she lists other potential problem solving methodologies.
24. School of Law, University of Warwick.
25. Paliwala, 1999, referring to Le Brun and Johnstone, 1994, p.56 and their citation of Biggs , 1989, p/ 8.
26. See Terry, 2001, quoting from his analysis of the future of legal education: 'It is also because we overestimate the law school time actually devoted to interaction (as opposed to, for example, independent study) and the quality of the interaction that actually takes place in our classrooms'.
27. As an accepted rule of thumb, a US law student should spend three hours of reading and preparing for an hour of contact lecture time. Thus, 25 percent of learning time occurs in the classroom. However, one could give a higher weight to the portion of the time spent in the classroom.
28. Paliwala, 1999 addresses the approaches of situated and contextualist learning. In the framework of European legal education, generally an apprenticeship type relationship must be completed before a degreed candidate may practice without supervision (mentioned by Mayer, 1999) – a practice I think the State Bar Associations should consider.
29. One of the proposed positive critiques of the Socratic method is that it forces students to read and prepare assigned cases. However, Theimann (1998) states in her findings at NYU: that it encourages students to miss class, thus the students miss the opportunity for interaction regarding the prepared cases. Secondly, she states that the students do not consider the Socratic method a practical approach to the practice of law, see Theimann, 1998, at 27. In summarizing Hawkins-Leon's critique, the Socratic method applied in the classroom encourages the student to remain within the case analysis, rather than perform independent, ancillary analysis.
30. See Paliwala, 1998, 1999. Quite often I am asked at conferences: 'Will online law schools reduce the role of the law professor to that of a teacher assistant?' This question has been put forward in articles and discussions in the CALI seminars. My response is: 'In light of the critiques of the Socratic method in relation to the student numbers in most first year law classes, in what way do you think that on-line delivery of materials and discussions changes the fundamentals of the established learning process in the US of teaching from casebooks and teacher notes prepared by other authors?' Rather than demote the role of the professor, the online possibilities enhance their role. If we consider one of the roles of the legal educator to be that of an intermediary, then there is a strong argument that the importance of the role of the legal educator will increase in the online learning process. The Internet multiplies the availability of resources and methods by which to interact with those resource possibilities. Each professor must, in essence, research and author his or her own methodology for resource interaction. The job of the legal educator to intelligently and efficiently package the available information becomes more difficult and time consuming. Online classroom presentations require more focus on the academic and research role of the professor, criteria adopted by most law faculties in assessing potential tenure. As an interesting side note, positions in the job market for niche subject matter are increasing as a result of C&IT. See generally Sheppard, 1999). Finally, it is my opinion that the methodology of assignments and feedback required in interactive online courses is not suitable for large class sizes, but rather smaller ones of no more than 40 students, because of the individualized attention required for each student.
31. An academic has a greater possibility of publication through the relatively inexpensive process of Internet dissemination of material. The important factor in academic publication is peer review and critique, not paper based dissemination. Furthermore, an academic has a greater opportunity to reach a geographically diverse audience for niche subject material through Internet dissemination of materials.
32. Employers and potential employers expect a reasonable experience and skill level to be obtained from an employee undertaking a post-graduate (Masters) law program.
33. Widdison and Schulte, 1998, discussing the approaches citing Jonassen and Reeves ,1996, 693 - 719; see also Paliwala, 1999, 2001. I present brief descriptions in the following paragraphs herein for purposes of our discussion.
34. Paliwala, 1999, 2001.The contextual learning approach is best exemplified by the use of law school clinics in place of European style apprenticeships; see also Thiemann, 1998, at 20. Thiemann refers to the element of contextual approach in legal pedagogy. Note that her presented definition of the context of legal study is the preparation of the adversarial role played by the attorney, identifying the contextual approach with the Socratic method.
35. The Ormrod Committee, discussed by Jones and Scully, 1996 .
36. Refer to the joint project of Professor John Blackie, University of Strathclyde, and Dr. Paul Maharg, Glasgow Caledonian University, concerning teaching Torts through disputing (mooting) using the Internet in Blackie 1998.
37 . In the 2001-02 academic year, the Program will experiment with asynchronic and synchronic streaming video to supplement the weekly chat rooms. In the past, technological difficulties on the recipient side have limited the use of streaming audio. The technological difficulties have arisen for recipients in jurisdictions with low modem speed and/or bandwidth connection.
38. Often students will find independent sites on their own and share these in the classroom. Of course, one site often leads to another and research and learning are thereby enhanced.
39. Within the Program's infancy, students help to create the best methods of delivery. In this case, students requested that questions also be posted in a separate Assignment category. By presenting the questions in this manner as well, students could better judge the level of work required for that module and thereby adjust their schedules.
40. Glossing refers to the method employed by the earliest law students in which they would annotate copies of the Justinian Code for pedagological purposes. Hyperlinks provide a similar method for the contemporary student. A current student has greater access to examples and text via the Internet than previous students. With this capability, a student can create his own glossary of text and links enabling efficient access to references. As future practitioners, these individuals will have more access to law and international comparisons than ever before.
41. Johnson 2000, at 111. The ABAs Principles for distance learning stress the importance of group learning in law school, stating: 'During a law school education a student is expected to participate in a learning community…Students…learn from each other by inquiry and challenge, review and study groups.
42. See Terry, 2001, see also Donahoe, 2000, at para. 63. 'Lecture is not very effective for the active learner, even lectures in which the students seem to participate. Students today cannot sit passively and listen to a lecture, even if they raise their hands to ask or answer questions. Usually the same few students answer the questions while the others take notes to actively learn later through study groups'.
43. This statement is of a generalized nature, meant to include the majority of students' experience.
44. Since the world of International Taxation often requires professionals to maintain a full travel itinerary, students have been known to post travel schedules in order to rendezvous with classmates who either live in the destination or will be passing through. This sort of networking proves invaluable in a field where so much expertise is required in so many jurisdictions.
45. A law school is first provisionally accredited by the American Bar Association during which time the ABA site team evaluates the school annually. Once a law school has been fully accredited by the ABA, a site team is sent out once every seven years for the normal accreditation visit.
46. In fact, one of the site team members, Professor Richardson R. Lynn, , Dean of Pepperdine School of Law, commented in a recent interview that he considered the LL.M program to be of high quality.
47 . See Widdison & Schulte 1998 for an in-depth discussion of these programs). Also see two new online programs: Franklin Pierce Law Center Education Law Institute (ELI): http://www.edlaw.fplc.edu/index.edlaw.html and Nova Southeastern University School of Law http://www.nsulaw.nova.edu/mhl/. Several newly developed online programs will be introduced in 2002.
48. The College of William and Mary, founded in 1693, is the second oldest educational institution in the US. Although Harvard began operation first, William and Mary's antecedents actually predate those of the Massachusetts institution. The College is the only U.S. institution to have a Royal Charter.
49. With Professor William Byrnes at William & Mary, November 1999.
50. Created in 1889, the University of New Mexico opened its doors in June 1892. The University of New Mexico School of Law was founded in 1947 and received ABA accreditation in 1948. For more information see the University website: http://www.unm.edu
51. Scott A Taylor, see profile. Taylor teaches primarily in the areas of taxation and Indian law. His Indian law work includes taxation in Indian Country and Indian Gaming and these courses include a substantial number of Native American law students. His Taxation in Indian Country course was the first law school course taught over the Internet and included students from the states of Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan, California, Washington, Kansas, and Montana, in addition to one student from Canada. Scott has served as a visiting professor at New York Law School (1986-87, 1991) and at the University of California at Davis Law School (1998-99), where he taught a variety of tax courses. During 1987-88 he served as the Professor-in-Residence in the Chief Counsel's Office of the Internal Revenue Service in Washington, D.C. In June 1999, Scott began a five-year term on the Navajo Tax Commission, which is a five-member body appointed by the Navajo Nation President and confirmed by the Navajo Nation Council.
52. These are comments made by an ABA site team member from the University of New Mexico, after evaluating the Regent Law LL.M program. A segment of St Thomas' faculty also has similar mixed feelings.
53 . The Universitat Des Saarlandes was founded in 1948 with French support. The University maintains a special relationship with France though its two campuses are located in Germany (Saarbrucken and Homburg). Currently there are 18,000 students and 270 professors. The Law and Economics department hosts the European Institute and focuses on the field of information technology (Computers and Law / Computer Science in Economics). For more details see the university web site: http://www.uni-sb.de
54. Professors Dr. Maximilian Herberger and Dr. Helmut Rumann have developed the 'Internet Project' which encompasses such topics as World Coverage of Civil Procedure, Cyberbanking Law, and the Law of E-Commerce in Germany. Visit the web site at http://www.jura.uni-sb.de/english/
55. The study guides developed by Professor William Byrnes also used this approach.
56. It must be noted that at the onset of this program, the Internet was not readily available or easily accessible by most students in the target markets. However, ATAX did make use of computer/electronic resources for circulation of a weekly Bulletin. ATAX also provides 'University Dial-up service' for this purpose.
57. For an argument in favor of the complete overthrow of the Socratic Case method, see Moskovitz, 1992.
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