Law in Contemporary Society

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DrinkingFromAFirehose 6 - 26 Apr 2008 - Main.ErikaKrystian
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Concerning today's discussion on reading/listening to internalize the material rather than forget it: is it possible that under some circumstances, there's simply too much material to internalize it all? It reminds me of the idea that high school is like sipping from a water fountain, college is like drinking from a garden hose, and law school is like trying to drink from a high-pressure fire hose. I'm making an honest effort to read for comprehension and understanding, but sometimes I feel like there's a bit too much for me to really remember it all.
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 Ahah! So Eben is a "hide-the-baller" just like the rest of 'em! I bet he was the second person ever to use SuperMemo? , and that's how he learned all of our names in a week smile

-- BarbPitman - 24 Apr 2008

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I think that actual learning also requires an understanding of why the new information matters. The "smartest" people I know seem to have brains like a huge sticky framework - when they learn something new, they think about how it relates to the information they already have and if/why that is interesting in some way. If it is interesting, they decide where this new information belongs in the framework and stick it there. This is related to the consilient learning idea as well.

Law school starts throwing piles of information at us from day one without ensuring that there is some framework of understanding to put it in. Why not spend the first semester in law school thinking about the law as philosophers would. What is this institution? What is it trying to accomplish? Then as we read new cases, whether it be in property or contracts, we should always be encouraged to think about the larger framework - where this fits in to our notions of social good/justice/punishment and whether it should be that way. Professors should tell us their thoughts and, encourage us to think about why this new information matters. Then we will be more likely to learn and more likely to do something worthwhile with the knowledge.

-- ErikaKrystian - 26 Apr 2008

 
 
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Revision 6r6 - 26 Apr 2008 - 18:36:09 - ErikaKrystian
Revision 5r5 - 24 Apr 2008 - 00:30:25 - BarbPitman
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