Creating Space for Silence in Law School Collaborations

IF 0.2 4区 社会学 Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Legal Education Pub Date : 2016-05-25 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2654726
A. Camp
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Law school programs are increasingly expanding collaborative experiences for their students. In many clinical programs, collaboration -- through team pairings and group work -- has been the norm, and gradually, collaborative work is being developed throughout the doctrinal law school curriculum. This trend fits within a broader societal emphasis on a collaborative model of working and learning. In both professional and educational settings, collaboration is viewed as critical to the success of ideas and products. Learning theory consistently identifies learning as being “inherently social” and best retained when engaged in with others. And, collaboration can substantially benefit the final work product and dramatically increase professional and educational satisfaction. However, when the collaborative process is not engaged in with intention and when not open to a variety of practices, collaboration can inhibit learning, productivity, and creativity. Research consistently finds that individuals who have an opportunity to consider problems on their own before collaborating outperform those whose ideas are generated exclusively in a group setting. Despite this, many collaborations value a team process that tends to isolate and ignore individuals who do not speak up quickly or easily, many with introverted personality styles, as well as others who do not fit within the “Extrovert Ideal.” The Extrovert Ideal rests on an assumption that an extrovert’s approach to group work, learning, and decision-making is the standard towards which all individuals should strive. This assumption may be particularly problematic for law students and lawyers who, as a group, include a higher percentage of introverts than the general population. This article considers whether law faculty are giving enough thought to the collaborative learning opportunities that are becoming a new normal in legal education and the legal profession. It considers how as currently executed, law school collaborations may not maximize student learning because they are grounded in a process that often interferes with the creation of ideas and the learning and environmental preferences because of rules that work best for extroverted students. This article concludes by offering concrete collaborative methods that allow space for intentional silence, and suggestions for helping students identify their own collaborative identity.
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在法学院合作中为沉默创造空间
法学院的课程正在为学生提供越来越多的合作体验。在许多临床项目中,合作——通过团队配对和小组工作——已经成为常态,并且逐渐地,合作工作正在贯穿于理论法学院的课程中。这种趋势符合更广泛的社会对工作和学习的协作模式的强调。在专业和教育环境中,协作被视为想法和产品成功的关键。学习理论始终认为学习是“固有的社会性”,与他人交往时学习效果最好。而且,协作可以极大地使最终的工作产品受益,并极大地提高专业和教育满意度。然而,当协作过程没有被有意参与,并且没有向各种实践开放时,协作可能会抑制学习、生产力和创造力。研究一致发现,在合作之前有机会独立思考问题的人,比那些只在团队环境中产生想法的人表现得更好。尽管如此,许多合作看重的是一个团队过程,这种过程往往会孤立和忽视那些不能快速或轻松地发言的人,许多人性格内向,以及其他不符合“外向理想”的人。外向的理想建立在一个假设上,即外向的人在团队工作、学习和决策方面的方法是所有人都应该努力达到的标准。这一假设对法律专业学生和律师来说尤其成问题,因为他们作为一个群体,内向的比例高于一般人群。在法学教育和法律职业中,合作学习已成为一种新常态,而法学教师是否对这种合作学习机会给予了足够的重视?它认为,就目前的执行情况而言,法学院的合作可能无法最大限度地提高学生的学习能力,因为它们建立在一个经常干扰思想创造、学习和环境偏好的过程中,因为规则最适合外向的学生。本文最后提供了具体的协作方法,为有意的沉默留出空间,并提出了帮助学生识别自己的协作身份的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Legal Education
Journal of Legal Education Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: The Journal of Legal Education (ISSN 0022-2208) is a quarterly publication of the Association of American Law Schools. The primary purpose of the Journal is to foster a rich interchange of ideas and information about legal education and related matters, including but not limited to the legal profession, legal theory, and legal scholarship. With a readership of more than 10,000 law teachers and about 500 subscribers, the Journal offers an unusually effective medium for communication to the law school world.
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