Refining the traditional flipped-classroom model to optimise student performance on undergraduate degree programmes
Berger, Dan and Wild, Charles
(2016)
Refining the traditional flipped-classroom model to optimise student performance on undergraduate degree programmes.
Journal of Commonwealth Law and Legal Education, 11 (1).
pp. 57-70.
ISSN 1476-0401
A paper which advocates the use of online lectures and face-to face workshops, together with an innovative third element – the skills-based face-to-face lecture – which is designed to improve and enhance students’ critical reasoning skills. Critical reasoning, in law and beyond, is defined as the combining of qualitative, subjective argument, or hypothesis, with supporting quantitative, objective, authority. The enhancement of this key skill is vital for not only academic success while students are undertaking their undergraduate degree courses, but has value to future employers in legal practice and many cognate fields
Item Type | Article |
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Additional information | This is a pre-copyedited, author produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Journal of Commonwealth Law and Legal Education following peer review. The version of record JCLLE (October 2016) 11(1): 57-70 is available on line at http://law-school.open.ac.uk/sites/law-school.open.ac.uk/files/files/JCLLE%20Vol%20%2011%20No%20%201%20Autumn%202016.pdf |
Keywords | flipped classroom, critical reasoning, student engagement, stduent performance, refined flipped classroom |
Date Deposited | 15 May 2025 13:07 |
Last Modified | 31 May 2025 00:04 |
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