All Articles tagged disruption
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT My classroom persona has depended on our actually being together in the same space. I have had to reimagine who I am in the classroom.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT I was barely holding the pieces of my life together, and I was fairly sure my students could tell.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT Under the rules for establishing credibility that I had been teaching by, this professor has no clothes.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT Our routines may be different, but we can certainly work toward sharpening our professional skills, including empathetic responses to our students and colleagues.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT What should we, as educators, make of this “tsunami” of stress?
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT Legal reasoning, as it's traditionally taught in legal writing classes, can paint a false veneer of neutrality and demand that injustices be replicated over and over again.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT It has become a moral imperative and a curricular obligation for law schools to provide students with at least an awareness of the intersection of societal injustice and law.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT In the face of inconceivable loss, people are crying out for justice. They are seeking a meaningful response to their stories.
Essays
March 01, 2021 EDT As a legal writing teacher, the recent protests have caused me to rethink my approach to teaching legal writing, the foundation of legal practice.