Slides from the presentation given by Paul Maharg (University of Northumbria) at the joint conference Open Educational Resources in the disciplines in October 2010.
Slides presented by John Garvey (U of New Hampshire) and Paul Maharg (Northumbria U) to Future Ed 2: Making Global Lawyers for the 21st Century, Harvard Law School, October 2010.
Slides from the presentation given by Paul Maharg (University of Northumbria) at the joint conference Open Educational Resources in the disciplines in October 2010.
Slides presented by John Garvey (U of New Hampshire) and Paul Maharg (Northumbria U) to Future Ed 2: Making Global Lawyers for the 21st Century, Harvard Law School, October 2010.
Slides used in a session on the SCI during the Legal Ethics Teaching Workshop, City University, October 2011, hosted by Clark Cunningham and Nigel Duncan.
Slides used in a session on the SCI during the Legal Ethics Teaching Workshop, City University, October 2011, hosted by Clark Cunningham and Nigel Duncan.
Slides for the presentation by Patricia McKellar (UKCLE) and Karen Barton (Glasgow Graduate School of Law) at the Higher Education Academy's ePortfolios for the 21st century meeting on 23 April 2008.
A discussion of an innovative simulation is really a discussion about what legal education can be. The shift in pedagogical focus in simulation and other moves from student-as-spectator to student-as-creator forms a new learning space, similar to that opened up by art objects, and by dramatic and musical performance. In a simulation environment such as SIMPLE, there is no beyond text because there is no entirely bounded docuverse called text. Text and all other forms of representation overlap, palimpsest-like, in our consciousness of the world. In much the same way, play itself in MUVEs and online communities is permeable, interweaves with non-play. Professionalism in legal communities is similarly porous with the personal values and attitudes of learners and professionals. What we need to do is to create the opportunities, the clearings in our overcrowded, often incoherent curricula, for the values of play, and the play of virtues to be encouraged, valued and enacted.
Presentation given to the Onati Workshop on 'One World, Different Cultures, Clashing Values: Legal Education in a Global Context', Onati, Spain. Hosted by the International Institute for the Sociology of Law, April 2009. Paper available.
Grad Cert Tertiary Learning and Teaching, my APL presentationSamuel Mann
Presentation for Grad Cert Tertiary Learning and Teaching (Level 7), Otago Polytechnic. A reflection on 10 years of teaching software engineering, capstone projects, Simpa and Sustainability.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Transactional learning is active learning, not passive. In that sense, we want students to be involved in activities within legal actions, rather than standing back from the actions and merely learning about them. transactional learning goes beyond learning about legal actions to learning from legal actions we aim to give them experience of legal transactions. Transactional learning involves thinking about transactions. It includes the ability to rise above detail, and "helicopter" above a transaction; or the ability to disengage oneself from potentially damaging views of the group process, and re-construct that view Students are valuable resources for each other. Collaborative learning breaks down the isolation and alienation of what might be regarded as isolated or cellular learning. There is of course a place for individual learning, silent study, and the like. But students can help each other enormously to understand legal concepts and procedures by discussing issues, reviewing actions in a group, giving peer feedback on work undertaken in the group, and so on. And perhaps what is even more important is that they begin to trust each other to carry out work that is important. In other words, students begin to learn how to leverage knowledge amongst themselves, and to trust each other’s developing professionality (learning about know-who, know-why, as well as know-what within the firm). Often, we have found, if there are firms that are not producing good work or keeping to deadlines, it is because they do not know how to work together effectively; and this often arises from a lack of trust. Transactional learning ought to be based on a more holistic approach. Allowing students to experience the whole transaction- and all the different parts- not just the actual procedure but how this may affect the client and how you may have to report this to the client. Transactional learning of necessity draws upon ethical learning and professional standards. There are many examples of how students have had to face ethical situations within the environment – some are ones where we have created a situation with an ethical issue- others have arisen unexpectedly. E.g mandate example ( if time) 7 & 8: Students are taking part in a sophisticated process that involves taking on the role of a professional lawyer within the confines of the virtual town and firm. In order to enhance the learning experience they must be immersed in the role play- and to do that they must be undertaking authentic tasks. Research suggests that when students are involved with online environment similar to the virtual village- that these authentic settings have the capability to motivate and encourage learner participation by facilitating students ‘willing suspension of disbelief’. This allows them to become immersed in the setting.