Promoting international human rights values through reflective practice in clinical legal education: a perspective from England and Wales
Promoting international human rights values through reflective practice in clinical legal education: a perspective from England and Wales
The global Clinical Legal Education (CLE) movement transcends borders as law teachers worldwide try to inculcate law students and future legal practitioners with social justice values. One method of achieving this is through developing reflective practitioners. Kolb, finding common ground in the work of Lewin, Dewey, and Piaget, formulated the four stages in the experiential development of concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, and active experiment. Although Kolb’s model is used in legal education literature, students may not be provided with the relevant conceptual tools required to engage in reflective practice. This often results in students providing subjective analysis of their work, which fails to fully contribute to their educational experience. One of the reasons for omitting analytical tools is that reflective practice suffers from a lack of conceptual clarity. According to Kinsella, the “concept remains elusive, is open to multiple interpretations, and is applied in a myriad of ways in educational and practice environments”. A further issue hindering reflective practice relates to Donald Schön’s critique of the positivist approach adopted by law schools.
109-127
Madhloom, Omar
50eccbe7-bad0-48de-a1da-a4fa995f695e
Antonopoulos, Irene
65ac3024-75c9-474d-9e14-223ddfdaee1b
9 April 2021
Madhloom, Omar
50eccbe7-bad0-48de-a1da-a4fa995f695e
Antonopoulos, Irene
65ac3024-75c9-474d-9e14-223ddfdaee1b
Madhloom, Omar and Antonopoulos, Irene
(2021)
Promoting international human rights values through reflective practice in clinical legal education: a perspective from England and Wales.
In,
Sengupta, Enakshi and Blessinger, Patrick
(eds.)
International Perspectives in Social Justice Programs at the Institutional and Community.
(Innovations in Higher Education Teaching and Learning, 37)
Emerald Publishing, .
(doi:10.1108/S2055-364120210000037008).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
The global Clinical Legal Education (CLE) movement transcends borders as law teachers worldwide try to inculcate law students and future legal practitioners with social justice values. One method of achieving this is through developing reflective practitioners. Kolb, finding common ground in the work of Lewin, Dewey, and Piaget, formulated the four stages in the experiential development of concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, and active experiment. Although Kolb’s model is used in legal education literature, students may not be provided with the relevant conceptual tools required to engage in reflective practice. This often results in students providing subjective analysis of their work, which fails to fully contribute to their educational experience. One of the reasons for omitting analytical tools is that reflective practice suffers from a lack of conceptual clarity. According to Kinsella, the “concept remains elusive, is open to multiple interpretations, and is applied in a myriad of ways in educational and practice environments”. A further issue hindering reflective practice relates to Donald Schön’s critique of the positivist approach adopted by law schools.
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Published date: 9 April 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 482519
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482519
PURE UUID: 13cead6b-8309-44df-9da7-eaf4156d40d5
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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2023 16:42
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:13
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Contributors
Author:
Omar Madhloom
Author:
Irene Antonopoulos
Editor:
Enakshi Sengupta
Editor:
Patrick Blessinger
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