Law Teaching

March 16, 2021
SALT Podcast: “Teaching Social Justice”

Remember to check out SALT’s podcast, Teaching Social Justice! Visit this page to learn more

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October 22, 2020
NEW Episodes Now Released! SALT Podcast: “Teaching Social Justice”

New episodes of SALT’s podcast, Teaching Social Justice, are available! Podcasts are available on Soundcloud here Also available on iTunes and Spotify!…

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August 11, 2020
NEW Episodes! SALT Podcast: “Teaching Social Justice”

New episodes of SALT’s podcast, Teaching Social Justice, are available! Podcasts are available on Soundcloud here Also available on iTunes and Spotify!…

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January 20, 2020
2020 SALT Teaching Conference – Call for Proposals

The Society of American Law Teachers is thrilled to announce that the 2020 SALT Teaching Conference will be held on September 25 – 26, 2020 at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. The Conference, Social Justice in Action, will provide opportunities to engage in broad, substantive, and…

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January 20, 2020
NEW! SALT Podcast: “Teaching Social Justice”

SALT’s new podcast, Teaching Social Justice, is now live! The first episode features Lisa Brodoff, the Director of the Ronald A. Peterson Law Clinic and an associate professor at Seattle University School of Law. The second features Matthew Fletcher, Professor of Law and Director of the Indigenous Law & Policy Center at…

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June 11, 2011
Teachers as Students — How to Make it Work

By Olympia Duhart There is a popular adage about teachers that I think of almost every single time I attend a teaching conference or workshop:  “Teachers make terrible students.” And, often, my attendance at conferences aimed at improving legal education proves that aphorisms have staying power for a reason. I confess that at times I have been less than stellar in my approach to conference participation. And I’m not alone. Look around the room at most conferences and some of the law professors and instructors who make up the audience for any given session are just as “off-task” as the students are in their own classrooms. We are surfing the web.  Doodling. Whispering to the person in the next seat.  Or just plain spacing out. But a funny thing happened last week in New York. I attended a teaching conference, and I was overwhelmed by the level of engagement and energy that both the presenters and the attendees displayed. The conference was jam-packed with innovative teaching ideas. People were taking notes and asking questions.  Volunteers were eager to share their own ideas to help their colleagues. Law professors spending the day as students were paying attention. Kudos to the Institute for Law Teaching and Learning and to New York Law School for sponsoring such a successful conference June 1-3. The theme for the 2011 ILTL Summer Conference was “Engaging and Assessing Our Students,” and the session leaders breathed life into the theme. 

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