Getting to Maybe
Legal Analysis: 100 Exercises for Mastery: Practice for Every Law Student offers 100 paced exercises to sharpen students' legal analysis skills.
Professors will find:
•  A bank of 100 legal analysis exercises at the ready, whenever students' analysis skills need attention or refinement
•  Exercises adaptable to any paradigm, that increase the depth of students' writing
•  Varied assignments that contain thoughtful sample answers and helpful annotations
•  Learning objectives and outcomes for each chapter
•  Assessment and grading rubric for each chapter
•  Go-to material ready for any class period
•  100 exercises that can be used as is or expanded to fit professors' preferences
•  Sample annotated answers for 50 of the exercises that their students can use to assess their own performance
•  Online resources for ready access to authority
Students will receive:
•  Tools students need to develop a keen understanding of rule-based and analogical reasoning
•  100 unique and fresh exercises to practice and self-assess their performance, using their own law school's analysis paradigm
•  Self-assessment opportunities to ensure progress in analysis
•  Learning objectives and outcomes for the legal analysis exercises
•  Writing assignments with self-contained feedback
•  Online resources for easy access to exercise cases, statutes, and regulations and helpful tips on improving legal analysis and writing skills
Academic support professionals can expect:
•  100 progressive legal analysis exercises for students to complete
•  Go-to material assignable to any student
•  Self-contained exercises that do not require particular knowledge of substantive law
•  Sample annotated answers for 50 of the exercises that students can review
•  Online resources for access to authority
Country | USA |
Binding | Kindle Edition |
Edition | 1 |
EISBN | 9780327174004 |
Format | Kindle eBook |
Label | LexisNexis |
Manufacturer | LexisNexis |
NumberOfPages | 478 |
PublicationDate | 2012-03-05 |
Publisher | LexisNexis |
ReleaseDate | 2012-03-05 |
Studio | LexisNexis |