Of grading rubrics and formative assessment

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Haneman, Victoria J.

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2021

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Abstract

No one reasonably expects that every class that you teach will be an award-worthy, primal act of creation. Indeed, there is the comfort of a home-cooked meal in traditional methods of law teaching because they remind us of how we were taught. It is time to recognize, however, that the success of traditional pedagogical approaches such as Socratic method — which has its place when carefully planned questions scaffold substantive information in such a way that a novice is drawn down a structured path — is wildly exaggerated by the legal academy. There is a disconnectedness from the learning process implicit in hiding the ball for the sake of hiding the ball, without ever pausing to assess whether the ball has indeed been found. This type of disconnectedness from the students is both familiar and entrenched, but is also slowly becoming less normative. Forward-looking legal education is rejecting the professor in this role and there is no question that the times they are a changin’.
The ABA has seen fit to ensure that formative assessment is here to stay, and there is no closing the lid on Pandora’s box. This chapter is designed to assist the doctrinal faculty member who has little experience with formative assessment and would like one straightforward example to incorporate into their class — in other words, this chapter is a dipping of one’s toe into the water.

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Victoria J. Haneman, Of Grading Rubrics and Formative Assessment, in LAWYERING SKILLS IN THE DOCTRINAL CLASSROOM: USING LEGAL WRITING PEDAGOGY TO ENHANCE TEACHING ACROSS THE LAW SCHOOL CURRICULUM 309 (Tammy Pettinato Oltz ed. 2021).

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