Abstract

This two-part article explores two central themes – student motivation and critical thinking – as they relate to teaching law students how to write like lawyers. The article examines these two themes through the lens of a case study on a legal writing programme, the “Write it Like a Lawyer” [WiLL] programme implemented at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, in 2019. The design of the programme draws upon three distinct teaching principles – constructive alignment, learner participation and conversations in feedback. This article argues that by applying these principles when teaching legal writing, law students are motivated to engage critically with legal materials, thereby enabling them to produce persuasive, logical, coherent legal writing, containing well-substantiated arguments. The article is in two parts. Part 1 begins by focusing on the theoretical underpinnings of the main themes of the article as well as the teaching principles applied in the WiLL programme. It then goes on to describe the significance of the central themes to a legal writing programme such as WiLL. Part 2 of this article moves on to a discussion of the three teaching principles – constructive alignment, learner participation (including blended-learning techniques) and conversations in feedback – and the manner in which these principles were used to achieve the desired outcomes in the WiLL programme. Finally, the second part of the article evaluates the relative success of employing the three principles in order to further student motivation and critical thinking in the programme. The article concludes with recommendations for improvements that could be implemented in future such programmes.

Highlights

  • Angela Diane Crocker BSc LLB LLM Lecturer, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Attorney of the High Court of South Africa. This two-part article explores two central themes – student motivation and critical thinking – as they relate to teaching law students how to write like lawyers

  • The aim of this two-part article is to explore two central themes – student motivation and critical thinking – as they relate to teaching law students how to write like lawyers

  • This article as a whole identifies two themes that are central to the teaching of legal writing to law students: student motivation and critical thinking

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Summary

SUMMARY

This two-part article explores two central themes – student motivation and critical thinking – as they relate to teaching law students how to write like lawyers. The article examines these two themes through the lens of a case study on a legal writing programme, the “Write it Like a Lawyer” [WiLL] programme implemented at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, in 2019. Part 2 of this article moves on to a discussion of the three teaching principles – constructive alignment, learner participation (including blended-learning techniques) and conversations in feedback – and the manner in which these principles were used to achieve the desired outcomes in the WiLL programme. The article concludes with recommendations for improvements that could be implemented in future such programmes

Bean Engaging Ideas
Various models of teaching legal writing exist
MOTIVATION IN TEACHING CRITICAL LEGAL
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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