Showing posts with label legal education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legal education. Show all posts

Sunday, May 14, 2017

Flipped Classroom for the Large Class

This past year I was honored to receive the Innovation in Teaching Award from the UConn School of business.  This post contains the text of my application.  I share it here to contribute to the ongoing discussion about the value traditional large lecture classes in undergraduate education.  I hope that you find my comments helpful.

Course: BLAW 3175/BADM 3720 The Legal and Ethical Environment of Business

Innovation: Use of a “Flipped Classroom” model of instruction for a large enrollment class (100-130 students).

The Challenge:  In a traditional large lecture course, a professor assigns readings from a text, delivers classroom lectures on a topic each class and then gives 2-3 objective exams, each covering multiple topics. Most recently, there has emerged three significant developments challenges to learning success in the large lecture class format. 
First, millennial generation learners have a tendency to “learn to the test.”  They display less intellectual curiosity than past learners.  Millennials tend to prefer to know a little about a lot of things, rather than to understand any particular subject in depth. The large lecture format reinforces this lack of depth by encouraging students to mechanically record information during lecture rather than using the information to foster understanding.  Second, phones and laptop computers in the classroom create competition for student attention in class.  Finally, a culture of textbook rejection permeates the college learning environment.  High costs of printed texts is only one factor in the shunning of textbook purchases.  Seeing themselves as consumers of education, rather than as learning partners, the millennial student expects the classroom lecture to deliver all that is needed for a grade. To their minds, the textbook is superfluous.

Based on the above, I determined that the traditional lecture format was no longer effective for learning in BLAW 3175, and explored use of a flipped classroom model beginning with the Spring 2016 semester. The flipped classroom employs a method of delivering information to students  outside of the classroom while classroom time is devoted to using that information to solve problems or otherwise exploring the relevance of the information in business context.  The goal is to get students to evolve beyond a high school style of learning that involves retaining information to pass a test, and to learn as adults do, converting information into understanding to guide decision-making. 

The Method:  The methodology has four steps:  1. Deliver information, 2. Use the information, 3. Re-examine the information, 4. Assess the learning.

1. Deliver information: To deliver information outside of class I worked with a publisher that specializes in interactive online texts (Great River Learning). Over two and a half years I collected and organized learning resources, writing and compiling a unique text. https://www.greatriverlearning.com/product-details/917 .  Unlike a traditional textbook, which simply involves reading words, or even a traditional online textbook which is merely a pdf of a printed book, this text is interactive, working more like a website.  The text makes liberal use of internet resources by repeatedly linking out to videos, websites, and blogs. Some of the videos are produced by other universities, news agencies or academic centers.  Some are music videos, comedy skits or other popular culture devices that have been selected to enhance the curriculum. Students, therefore, work in a familiar medium that is similar to web surfing rather than reading a traditional text. 

2. Use the information: Since information is being delivered outside of class, class time is used to work with that information to construct understanding.   Students are assigned into small discussion groups that are permanent for the semester. In one of the weekly class sessions, students work in the small discussion groups responding to a discussion prompt. The prompt is designed so that students will use the information they received through the text to evaluate a relevant instance or circumstance (either a hypothetical or an example drawn from current events). I walk among the groups listening to the discussions and giving individualized direction where needed. Every 10 minutes or so, the attention of the class is called back to the front and the prompt is adjusted or enhanced as appropriate to stimulate further discussion.  Each group is given a summary sheet to report the results of their discussions at the end of the class.

3. Re-examine the information:  After working through each module in the text, students answer a number of early assessment or polling questions. After examining the results on the early assessment questions, I use the second class meeting of the week to concentrate efforts on enhancing understanding of any concepts that showed poor results in the early assessment. Instead of lecturing on an entire module, I can pick the few problem topics and emphasize more provocative examples to illustrate concepts in the targeted areas. Typically, I present the detailed and nuanced material that had been previously left out of traditional lectures because of the need to cover the breadth of general information.  The class is sprinkled with i-clicker response questions where both students and instructor receive immediate feedback on the level of understanding of concepts. Also, I will have reviewed the results of the discussion sessions and will typically have more feedback or follow-up and, when necessary, can return students to back to the discussion groups for further consideration. 

4. Assess the learning: Each text module (20 in all) has an online assessment that is available to students beginning after the second class meeting of the week and is available for 36 hours.  Students who are ready to take the assessment will do so immediately.  Those who wish to re-read the textual material or ask questions of the instructor have time to do so.  Instead of having to “cram” for an exam covering many topics, the assessments cover the material from the most recent module.

Student responses on SETs have been overwhelmingly positive. Students who comment otherwise have said that they prefer not to be challenged to have to think during class.  I consider those comments to indicate a successful result.

Friday, November 18, 2016

Law School Songs

Stressed, worried, impoverished, insecure, feeling inadequate, intimidated, exhausted, disappointed, overworked . . . welcome to the law, young people..





Tuesday, October 4, 2016

The Hot Coffee Case Comic Book

The Liebeck v. McDonald's lawsuit is now drawn up as a comic book. We can lecture about it. We can show the movie. We can show any of a number of videos. Now, see the comic book.  Next,
maybe the song?

Anything to get the point across.

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Companies' Fatal Failures to Warn of Product Dangers

The national press is reporting that after discovering a dozen serious infections in European hospitals resulting from the use of their medical scopes, Olympus Corp. notified European Hospitals of the risk.  At the same time, the company ordered its American executives NOT to warn American hospitals. Allegedly, thirty-five U.S. patients died after the European warnings and while American hospitals remained in the dark about the infection risk.

This same scenario seems to play out again and again - from exploding Ford Pintos to suddenly accelerating Toyotas to stalling Chevy Cobalts - and precious human lives were lost. Ultimately, the businesses suffered devastating fines, reputational damage and hyperinflated expense. Are executives always motivated to cash out on short term bonuses leaving subsequent executives to pick up the pieces?  Is there anything we can do in education America's future executives to break the pattern?

Conn. Senator Blumenthal touts his actions against GM's deceit:

Monday, April 27, 2015

Is it Statue or Statute?

Thanks to my colleagues at NEALSB this past weekend.  It was another enjoyable weekend of law and laughter. At dinner we talked about this Seinfeld clip and the 2000 vocabulary words that Robert Wiener's students at Pace are required to spell (OK, it was "2 dozen," but we all heard "2 thousand.")

Vocabulary lesson #1: Is it STATUE of limitations or STATUTE of limitations?




Thursday, April 23, 2015

Teaching Evolution to Creationists; Is it Relevant to Business Law?

I am sharing today a link to an enlightening essay by James J. Krupa entitled Defending Darwin.  Krupa's subtitle gives you the gist of what to expect: "I teach human evolution at the University of Kentucky.  There are some students I will never reach."

In reading the essay I immediately made a connection between Krupa's experience with students whose religious beliefs cause them to reject the science of evolution out of hand, and my own experience with students whose political ideology causes them to dismiss, out of hand, the logic that disproves the fallacy of frivolous lawsuit abuse.

There are students that are convinced that our legal system is plagued with tens of thousands of meritless lawsuits that have been brought against major corporations by unscrupulous lawyers secure in the knowledge that the corporation would rather settle the case immediately for hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not $1M or more, rather than suffer the cost of defense or the "embarrassment" of the lawsuit.

I recently posited for my students, the facts of two cases brought against TV networks.  One was based on the sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Bill O'Reilly and Fox News. After being accused of inappropriate solicitation of a female producer O'Reilly vociferously denied any such conduct and called the lawsuit "extortion."  The plaintiff's lawyer produced taped recordings of O'Reilly's lewd, suggestive and solicitous phone messages.

The other case was the "Fear Factor Rat Eating Episode" law suit.  A viewer of this episode of NBC's "Fear Factor" show, suddenly feeling nauseous and dizzy suffered injuries by running into a door jam during a desperate attempt to leave the room where the TV was located.

At this point, I asked the students in which of the two cases they would consider representing the plaintiff.  Overwhelmingly, students chose case #1 and rejected case #2.  However, there were a staunch few students who insisted that case #2 was just as likely to result in a quick and extremely lucrative settlement as case #1.

We then discussed the actual outcome of the cases.  #1 settled within a few weeks for an undetermined sum in the millions of dollars.  Case #2 was summarily dismissed on motion to the court.

For the benefit of the students convinced of the a ubiquity of quick, lucrative settlements of meritless cases,  I asked the following question;  What would happen to a corporation that developed a reputation of paying large sums of money in settlement of meritless lawsuits?  The logic was obvious as was the response from most of the students.

Still, much like Krupa's students who followed up with him to confirm what their religion tells them is true, I heard from a handful of students who were convinced, without evidence, that major corporations regularly pay out millions of dollars in settlement of meritless lawsuits. Likewise, lawyers regularly pursue these meritless lawsuits because they are a lucrative source of revenue for them.

It is possible that we fail to communicate over the definition of the term "meritless."  For instance, perhaps these students consider the McDonald's coffee case as meritless, while I consider it a bona fide claim.  However, should we be disagreeing over the Rat Eating Episode lawsuit?

As Krupa states with regard to a former student who came to see him years later, "Now a doctor, he explained to me that, at the time, he was so upset with my seminar that he attended a number of creationists’ public lectures for evidence I was wrong. He said he found himself embarrassed by how badly these individuals perverted Christian teachings, as well as known facts, to make their argument. He wanted me to know that he came to understand he could be a Christian and accept evolution. Then he did something that resonates with any teacher: He thanked me for opening his eyes, turning his world upside down, and blurring the line between black and white."

Like religious beliefs, political ideology can interfere with a student's ability to embrace the evidence and logic of the lesson. As it is possible to be a Christian and accept evolution, it is possible to maintain a political ideology and understand the legal system as it actually functions. You just have to be open to understanding both.

Click here to read a related story about what would appear to be unnecessary tensions between academia and evangelicalism.

Related posts at LSCB: Quick Settlement: When and Why?
Frivolous Lawsuits Are Good For America
Spotlight on Frivolous Lawsuits

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Guest Blogger: Robert Prentice - The Role of Role Morality in the North Carolina Athletic Academic Scandal

The Role of Role Morality in the North Carolina Athletic Academic Scandal

            Here’s a teachable moment.  Both business professors and students should pay close attention to the academic scandal at the University of North Carolina where “paper” courses were offered in disproportionate numbers to mostly football and basketball players in order to keep them eligible to play without requiring them to attend class, read, write, or learn anything.  For years grades for independent study classes in the Afro-American Studies Department were handed out on a “need” basis rather than an “earned” basis by office secretary Debby Crowder and, to a lesser degree, by department chair Julius Nyang’oro.  Plagiarism was rampant.  The utter lack of academic standards was unconscionable and inexcusable.  It greatly damaged UNC’s reputation as a university that could balance successful athletic programs with high academic standards.
            The important lesson here is not so much what happened as why it happened.  A natural conclusion might be that Crowder and Nyang’oro were corrupt, or greedy, or just bad people.  But the recently-released 131-page Wainstein Report makes it clear that Crowder and Nyang’oro did bad things, but not to line their pockets, or even to promote their department.  Their primary motivation was to help the students.  Crowder’s background led her to do almost anything to help students who were struggling, as she had once struggled herself.  Nyang’oro had taught two students athletes early in his career who had become academically ineligible and been forced to leave school. One had soon been murdered and the other ended up in prison.  Nyang’oro wished to avoid similar future tragedies.
            Crowder’s and Nyang’oro’s motives mirrored those of the teachers and administrators at the center of the Atlanta public school scandal that is still playing out.  In Atlanta, smart and dedicated teachers changed exam answers so that their students could pass standardized tests and their schools could stay open.  They thought their students had worked hard and were doing the best they could, so they cheated to prevent the students from being labeled as “failures” and having their schools closed down.  The motivation was understandable, but people are going to jail for their actions and, like UNC, the Atlanta school system will be under a cloud for years to come.
            The notion of role morality provides some context here.  Oftentimes people will do unethical things that they would not ordinarily do because of a role they perceive that they are playing inside an organization.  They might never lie to put money in their own pockets, but find themselves stretching the truth so that their company can meet its profit goals.  In their role as a “loyal employee,” they give themselves permission to be dishonest.  They might never cheat to advance their own career, but they do to help their child get into a better school than the child deserves.  In their role as “loving parent,” they give themselves permission not to live up to their normal standards.
            It is obviously easier to rationalize wrongdoing if we are doing it not to help ourselves but to help someone else, such as our students, our friends, our family, or our co-workers.  If students understand how role morality can make them vulnerable to taking unethical actions, they can guard against such mistakes.   It might be helpful for them to view the educational video on role morality at my school’s website:  http://ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/video/role-morality.  The video is easily-available, award-winning, and, best of all, free.

Robert Prentice
McCombs School of Business

University of Texas at Austin

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Featured Website: YouTube Channel for Jason Mance Gordon

ALSB member Jason Mance Gordon from Georgia Gwinnett College maintains a YouTube site with a hundred or more short informative videos on BLAW topics. I find that sometimes it is important to stop prattling on in front of the class and show a video, even if it is just another professor talking.  It is at least something different that causes students to look up from their computers.  Also, links can be provided for students who need a quick explanation of a concept.  As always with YouTube videos, you should screen the video first to make sure it is consistent with your own teaching.

Example: What is a Tort?

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Student Evaluation of Teaching: "We Had to Learn it Ourselves."

The Student Evaluation of Teaching is always an interesting tool for evaluation of one's job performance. Thankfully, at my school administrators seem to pay attention to them, but not so much as to overemphasize the results.  I find them useful and pay special attention to the comments that students enter beyond the numerical rankings. Over the many years these comments have helped me to understand the undergraduate mind and make what I believe to be improvements in the content and presentation of material.

One comment that I received on SET form this past Spring semester has really been gnawing at me. When prompted for  comments about my teaching one student responded, "We had to learn many topics ourselves."  I had never seen a comment like this before. Apparently, these types of comments are not all that unusual. According to this article, today's students are inclined to complain that they are not being taught and have to think in order to learn the material.

As I thought about the comment and became introspective about my teaching methods, I realized that I was surprised that I had not seen comments like this before. Indeed, I can teach material, but students always must learn on their own.  I have developed methods over the years where I intentionally lead student far down the path through the woods to the cool clear lake, but stop short of pushing them in - assuming that they can take that last leap into the water on their own.  The journey is the learning process.

But for today's students, these methods may begin to negatively affect my SETs. I can speculate about the causes. First, students are distracted by their phones and laptops during class. Consequently, they are not participating in the learning journey.  They just look up to see the destination.  Having no idea how they got there, it is impossible to extrapolate the learning experience to other concepts. They don't have to use maps to get places, they follow GPS instructions while simultaneously listening to an i-pod.

Second, researchers tell us that today's generation of students are less intellectually curious.  They are less interested in acquiring knowledge than in obtaining information necessary to complete a specific task (i.e. earn an exam grade). Millennials are much more interested in "checking a box" as done and moving on.

Finally, our students are digital natives. They always have information at their fingertips. Everything is "breaking news."  Anything and everything they want to know comes to them automatically without effort through Facebook, Twitter, and other social media even as they are sitting in your class. Consequently, it is disconcerting to them that they might have to put together a string of thoughts and carefully analyze alternatives to arrive at a conclusion.

I don't plan on making any radical changes in teaching methods in the near future.  But I am interested in watching for these types of comments in future surveys to determine if a change is necessary. On a larger scale, these considerations go right to the core of the purpose and effectiveness of higher education.  I encourage my students to see themselves as life long learners.  I hope that I can remain one as well and will try to learn as much about how my students learn as I can. But right now I have to go to click on the Facebook link I just got to see the latest adorable kittens video.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Student Engagement

Today, I am giving a presentation at the Business Educators conference in San Diego on using Music and Humor to foster student engagement.  Regular readers will know that I have long advocating for bringing music into the classroom in many forms and I have made presentations on this subject before at regional and national conferences.

Coincidentally, just this last week, CBS ran a report on a "super teacher" in South Korea.  Watch the video below to see some of the teacher's methods.  (The rest of the report is interesting, too)

Monday, November 18, 2013

Pop Quiz

Who is credited with making the insightful observation:

 "The law must be stable, but it must not stand still"? 

A. Roscoe Conkling, influential 19th century US Senator from NY


B. Roscoe Pound, former Dean of Harvard law School


C. Ezra Pound, American expatriate poet


D. Paula Poundstone, comedienne


The answer, of course, at least according to SearchQuotes, is Paula Poundstone. (see screen shot below)


If it's on the internet it must be correct, right?  Here is an example to share with students about double-checking sources.

The real answer, as most readers will know, and as most  internet sites state correctly, is Roscoe Pound.


Thursday, November 7, 2013

What Duty Does a University Owe its Student Interns?

Are we sending our undergraduate students, especially female students, into a lion's den?

Many business programs either require or encourage students to seek internships as part of their undergraduate education.  These internships are typically unpaid.  As recently confirmed by a US District Court ruling, unpaid interns are not employees and, therefore, are not covered by the laws protecting employees in the workplace. The intern in that case, a Syracuse University student, was placed in an unpaid internship at the offices of a satellite television provider. She claimed to have been sexually harassed by an executive there. While our students are typical placed in professional business settings, these settings are not immune from incidents  of sexual harassment - incidents from which our students have little legal recourse.

It would seem that universities, at the minimum, should be charged with an obligation to advise students of this lack of protection and to monitor their workplaces closely - far more closely I am afraid than has been the norm to date. Perhaps readers can share suggestions in the comments section of this post.

 

Friday, November 1, 2013

Legally Blonde, The Musical

Harvard Professor Callahan educates his students: exploit your superior resources to take advantage of the weak, scruples are a flaw, and emotions make you weak.  The successful lawyer smells the blood in the water.

"Is it unfair, Oh, wait! I don't care"

"You're nothing until the thrill of the kill becomes your only law."

Is such a public perception of lawyers justified?

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Ethics Unwrapped and Updated at UT Austin

The 2013 Charles M. Hewitt Master Teacher Award recipient Robert Prentice from the University of Texas shares the followings:

Our EthicsUnwrapped FREE educational ethics video site was recently upgraded and updated with new short videos about behavioral ethics and eight new videos about Mary Gentile's Giving Voice to Values program for helping students act effectively when they know what the right thing to do is.  

The LSCB previously featured and recommended the Ethics Unwrapped site. Once again, you are encouraged to explore this site and incorporate these innovative resources into your curriculum.



Introduction to Giving Voice to Values  from Ethics Unwrapped site:

Friday, October 25, 2013

More Law School Ditties

Here are more law professors using songs in class. Don't sell this method short.





Friday, October 11, 2013

Law School Ditties

More songs in the classroom courtesy of Prof. Erichson at Fordham U School of Law.

Eerie v Tompkins


Pennoyer v. Neff

Friday, October 4, 2013

The Gross Income Song

From the University of Oregon Law School.  This is actually a student, encouraged by the professor.

Friday, September 27, 2013

An Engaged Classroom

This isn't law - but something is going on in this classroom that students are remembering.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Law Music Video: Songs in the Classroom

On occasions too numerous to link here, I have suggested the beneficial pedagogical use of song in the legal studies classroom. Perhaps the broadest support is included here.  Or click on the tabs for law lessongs, law songs or music videos in the index on the left.  Clearly, I am not the only educator thinking this way.  Contracts professor Mark Petit at BU Law School has been a national news story for using songs in his class.  ALSB colleague Robert Emerson at U of Florida uses costumes and theater to reach his students.

The Friday Law Music Video posts for the next several weeks will feature other examples of college professors making pedagogical use of songs in their classrooms. Perhaps, you will find encouragement to experiment with non-traditional but effective teaching methods.




Friday, August 9, 2013

2013 ALSB Charles M. Hewitt Master Teacher Competition

This past Thursday I had the honor of making a teaching methods presentation to the assembled membership of the Academy of Legal Studies in Business as one of four finalists in the Charles M. Hewitt Master Teacher competition. The other three finalists were:
Sandra Benson, Middle Tennessee State University, "The Legal Beagle News Show" 
John McArdle, Salem State University, "What's So Funny about Peace, Love, Understanding and Pasta?"
Robert Prentice, University of Texas - Austin, "Teaching Behavioral Ethics"
All the presentations were innovative and indicative of this unique academy of academics who manage to take great pride and effort in teaching law in business schools while also maintaining the highest standards of research and record of publication.

The post below fulfills the promise I made at the presentation to post my materials online so that they could be easily copied and pasted into whatever format my colleagues might choose to use. To you, my colleagues, I once again express my thanks. I hope that you will feel free to adapt and use any of these materials in your courses and am flattered by the prospect.

2013 Charles M. Hewitt Master Teacher Competition
PROPOSAL
 “Jury, Jury, Halleluiah”: Replacing Myths With Understanding
Submitted by
 I. Proposal Description:

I'm gonna talk to my lawyer - I think I've got a pretty good case.
All I need are some crutches - maybe I'll put on a neck brace.
I've got a witness - to put a hand on the Bible,
Jury, jury, hallelujah - somebody's liable.
- Chuck Brodsky from the song Talk to My Lawyer.

The legal system abounds with ritualistic symbols and practices from the bailiff’s formal announcement of the opening of court to the judges’ black robes. Perhaps none remains more mysterious to the public than the role of the jury.  Consequently, legal folklore replaces actual facts and understanding in the minds of the public. Popular culture has portrayed jury duty much like a colonoscopy – it’s probably necessary, but should be put off as long as possible if not avoided entirely.  Most of the media that our students interact with on a regular basis - songs, YouTube videos, comedy routines, College Humor website, etc. – portray jury duty as either silly or evil. Consequently, one must wonder what our students already “know” about juries and how best to bust the myths and replace them with understanding.

The proposed teaching method has three components: First, turn the class into jurors by presenting them with a hypothetical case and charging them with the jury’s role.  Second, monitor their deliberations looking for the teachable moments where they seem to be yearning for understanding or exhibiting misinformation. Third, bring the class back together to fill their empty cups with knowledge about the jury system and re-direct their misunderstandings.

A. Learning Objectives:

The principle objective of this teaching method is to replace myths about the jury system with knowledge and understanding on each of the following subjects:

1.      The role of the jury in the legal system
2.      Jury selection
3.      Nature of jury deliberations and procedures
4.      Importance of evidence, evidentiary rulings and burden of proof
5.      Relationship of judge and jury
6.      Jury nullification

B. Proposed Classroom Teaching Session (75 minute class)

1. Turn the students into jurors: (10 mins.)
At the start of class students are asked to form groups of approximately equal size (usually 8-12 per group).  They are asked to relocate their seats to a place where they can deliberate and hear each of the group members speaking. They are to close and leave their laptops computer at their seats and to put away smart phones.

Students are then presented the case of State v. Muffy (Appendix A) by projection on a screen of a written recitation of the facts and testimony, read by the instructor.  At the end of the presentation, the students are charged to deliberate as jurors. Each jury is presented with a jury slip (Appendix B) and instructed to return a unanimous verdict or be prepared to explain why they could not do so. Jurors are advised that any questions asked of the judge (instructor) must come from the foreperson and be certified by the full jury. By design, no further instructions are given.

2. Monitor deliberations for teachable moments: (30 mins)
As the juries deliberate, walk along the edges of the deliberations taking notes of the process.  What do the juries deem to be important?  What are they missing? What are they confused about? Are they following the charge? Etc.

3. Bring the class back together: (35 mins)
After the designated time, call in the verdict slips, report the results and address the class on the basis of what resulted during the deliberations.  Some of what you present will be prepared while some of it will come to you as a result of what happens during deliberations. Based on many semesters of employing this exercise, the exercise reliably produces experiences and questions that align with the learning objectives as follows:

1. The role of the jury in the legal system:
·         This case raises an issue of conflicting medical opinions. Credible medical science is not in agreement regarding shaken baby syndrome. Yet, a lay jury is expected to come to a resolution on a matter that the experts can’t resolve.

2. Jury selection:
·         Would jurors with medical experience be seated or dismissed? Why? Other countries use juries comprised of experts.  Which method is better? Why?
·         How does the role of lawyers in the adversarial system affect jury selection?  Show an excerpted training video for new prosecutors advising them to choose biased juries in order to win cases, avoiding “blacks from low income areas” and smart people.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f40CZR2Fx2w   McMahon Philadelphia DA Training Video (excerpts).  

3. Nature of jury deliberations
·         As mock jurors, students experience the collaborative decision making process.  Even though they have all received the same evidence, they learn that each comes away with different perceptions.
·         Student jurors will experience having to justify and support their positions and attempt to persuade hold out jurors.

4. Importance of evidence, evidentiary rulings and burden of proof
Student jurors will:
·        - want to hear testimony from Ashley. But she was not presented as a witness, so they may not. There is the opportunity to talk about the challenges with child witnesses.
·         -debate the credibility of the doctors, even though they never saw any live witnesses. Assessing credibility is an important function of the jury
·        - debate the evidence received from the “fact” witnesses. This presents the opportunity to query whether any of them would have been allowed to testify in a trial.  Evidence must be relevant and probative. Prior bad acts? Character?
·       -  want to use their laptops to search for more medical information. Can shaken baby syndrome produce death from a single incident?  Could the effects be delayed from a shaking event that occurred hours or days before? There are no answers in the evidence.
·        - Examine the concept of “reasonable doubt” and whether the state has met its burden of proof.
·         use their own knowledge and common sense in conjunction with or contrary to the evidence.  Should there be bruising on the abdomen? Hand marks?
·      -   exhibit sympathy. The family has suffered enough. If Muffy is guilty then Ashley will not have her mother. What role should/does sympathy play in jury decisions?

5. Relationship of judge and jury
·         As you observe deliberations, individual jurors will blurt out question to you.  You can’t answer them.  Only if the jury discusses and decides that the question should be posed can you accept a question from the foreperson.
·         Student/jurors will struggle with the definitions of the law. Some recognize that it may be negligent to leave Chase on the chair, but is it reckless? Intentional? They will seek clarification but all you can do is repeat the charge as given.
·         Some student jurors presume that they will have a role in sentencing if they find guilt.  There is the opportunity to explain that this is the role of the judge. A lasting impression is made discussing the Georgia case of Billy Crowder:

6. Jury Nullification
·         The Crowder case gives an opportunity to talk about evolution of the role of the jury. The jury may once have been the conscience of the community as far as determination of right and wrong.  It is now simply a fact-finder. The charge to the jury is typically in this form, “If you find X, then you must enter a verdict of guilty/not guilty.”
·         Juries have the ability to nullify, if not the right to do so. What are the effects?
·         Show video of Frank Galvin’s summation in “The Verdict” imploring the jury to do “justice” despite the judge’s instructions to the jury to disregard the testimony of his key witness: http://www.americanrhetoric.com/MovieSpeeches/moviespeechtheverdict.html  Galvin tells the jury, “Today, you are the law.”
·         What are the procedural safeguards against/parameters of jury nullification?

C. Methods of Evaluation

Student learning is assessed in examinations through topical questions. The jury exercise is frequently referenced by students during course evaluations as a positive experience.


II. Master Teacher Presentation:

Presentation of State v. Muffy
Presentation of class material that follows deliberation including:
            Jury selection video
            Billy Crowder story (39:25 – 40:40)
            The Verdict video


III. Qualifications:

2012 Charles M. Hewitt Master Teacher Competition Finalist

Editor of the Legal Studies Classroom Blog, http://legalstudiesclassroom.blogspot.com/, a nationally recognized resource of innovative curricular material for use in the undergraduate legal studies classroom.  The LSCB has received an average of 4,400 page views per month for academic year 2012-2013.
Founder and Content Generator for the Profblaw YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/profblaw?feature=mhee featuring songs for use in legal education. The profblaw channel has 286 subscribers.  The videos housed there have been viewed over 120,000 times (average of over 4,100 video views per month) and have been featured on the ContractsProf Blog ( i.e. http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/contractsprof_blog/2012/04/professor-deangelis-on-the-mirror-image-rule.html )

UCONN School of Business Undergraduate Teaching Award Recipient (2006); Co-Recipient (2011) representing the only two occasions on which the applicant was eligible for the award.

UCONN Student Board of Governors, Nominated for Educator of the Year (2009)

APPENDIX A
TRIAL COURT EXERCISE: STATE v. MUFFY

To all the world, Biff and Muffy were ideal parents to their 4 year old daughter Ashley and their 15 month old son, Chase.  Muffy had given up her job as a stock market analyst to stay home with her two young children.  Biff worked as an investment banker.   On Sept. 1, 2010, Muffy rushed into the emergency room at County General Hospital with Chase in her arms.  She was hysterical.  Chase was unconscious.  According to Muffy, Chase was standing on a chair at the dining room table, coloring in a book, while Muffy sat next to him talking to him about his picture.  Muffy was called away from the table and into the kitchen by Ashley who wanted some juice.  Muffy was gone from the dining room only momentarily.  When she returned, she saw Chase lying on the carpeted floor at the foot of the chair, unconscious.  She presumed that he had fallen from the chair.  She picked him up, laid him down on the back seat of the car, gathered up Ashley and rushed to County General.

At County General, Chase came under the care of Dr. Good, a physician Board Certified in emergency medicine.  Dr. Good examined Chase and found no skull fracture, no bruising or other evidence of external head trauma.  However, CT scans revealed significant brain injury.  Dr. Good consulted with Dr. Smart, the head of pediatric medicine at County General.  Dr. Smart examined Chase and the test results.  Both Dr. Good and Dr. Smart concluded that the pattern of brain injury suffered by Chase was consistent with only one cause, "shaken baby syndrome."  Dr. Good called the police.  Immediate and heroic surgical measures were undertaken to reduce the swelling in Chase's brain but were unsuccessful.  He died during surgery.

After surgery, Dr. Good explained his findings to the investigating detective.  Over the next three days, the police conducted an investigation and when Muffy returned home from Chase's funeral, she was arrested for his murder.

At the trial of the case, the prosecution's case was presented as follows:

A copy of the County General admitting form which contained Muffy's version of the facts as related to the admitting nurse (as stated above).

Testimony of  Greecemon Key, an auto mechanic who lived in the house next door to Muffy and  Biff.  He testified that on occasion, he would hear Muffy and Biff engage in loud, angry arguments.  On those occasions, he had heard crashes, as if items within the house were being broken.  On a couple of occasions, he had heard a baby crying for long periods of time followed by either or both Muffy or Biff angrily raising their voices and shouting.  He could not make out what words were being said.  On cross-examination, he admitted that he had never seen an ambulance called to the house, had never seen any sign of physical injury on either Muffy or Biff or any of the children, other than an occasional small band-aid.

Testimony of  Tia Cher, a licensed pre-school teacher at the pre-school attended by Ashley.  She related an incident that she witnessed one day when Muffy and the children were disembarking their mini-van in the school parking lot to drop Ashley off at school.  Muffy was apparently upset with Chase for spilling juice on the seat of the car.  Muffy spoke angrily to Chase and then, without warning, pulled down his pants and diaper and spanked him three or four times on his bare bottom with apparent force.  Chase immediately began to scream and cry.  On cross-examination, Muffy's lawyer elicited Tia's testimony that within moments after the spanking, Muffy gathered Chase up in her arms and sat in the car rocking him and soothing him until he quieted.  Although Tia could not hear what was said, between 3 and 5 minutes after "the spanking" Muffy and Ashley and Chase all emerged from the car and all seemed to be smiling and happy.  They had a "race" to the door of the school during which all three were giggling and playing as Chase toddled happily along.


Testimony of Grann Ola, a certified Lamaze instructor that Muffy had taken a Lamaze/Natural Childbirth Preparation course with her when Muffy was pregnant with Ashley and a refresher course when she was pregnant with Chase.  Each course included some instruction on the causes and harms of various physical conditions suffered by infants and toddlers, such as fetal alcohol syndrome, sudden infant death syndrome, failure to thrive syndrome and shaken baby syndrome.  Each couple was charged with finding and presenting a magazine article on a relevant pre or post-natal health issue. Muffy had shared with the class a magazine article that she read discussing the cause and effects of shaken baby syndrome.

Testimony of Dr. Godfreid Good that his physical examination of Chase revealed an injury consistent with "shaken baby syndrome."  This type of injury results when an infant or toddler is shaken with such force that the brain inside the skull is literally bounced back and forth off of the inside of the skull.  The brain will show significant bruising and swelling in both the front and the rear.  There is no injury to the outside of the skull.  Dr. Good testified that in his medical opinion, there is no other mechanism that could have produced the type of injury suffered by Chase.  Dr. Good has been practicing emergency medicine for 20 years.  He has seen at least 50 cases that he has diagnosed as "shaken baby syndrome injuries."  Of those, 3 have resulted in death.  He also testified that he found four small bruises on Chase's legs, and one on the abdomen.  All were relatively recent (within a few days) and of undeterminable origin. At the emergency room, he asked Biff about the bruises.  Biff said that Chase, who had only started walking on his own within the last three to four weeks," had fallen a couple of times."

Testimony of Dr. Sylvia Smart that the results of her physical examination of Chase and her diagnosis were consistent with Dr. Good's.  Further, Dr. Smart is a member of the Board of Editors of the "Traumatic Childhood Injuries Reporter," a professional medical journal.  Her recent article, Classic Signs of Shaken Baby Syndrome, went to publication about a month before Chase's death.  The prosecutor read parts of the article into the record and Dr. Smart confirmed that Chase's case was consistent with the "classic" signs of shaken baby syndrome as described in her article.  Dr. Smart has been in the practice of medicine only 10 years, but is well respected for her academic and scholarly research in the field.  She has only been involved in the actual treatment of 10 shaken baby syndrome cases, but has studied the syndrome extensively.  Chase's case was the first patient that she had who died from these causes.

The case for the defense was as follows:

Testimony of Biff that Muffy was a tender, caring and loving mother and that she gave all of herself to her children.  He had never seen Muffy spank or strike or shake either of the children.  In fact, he could only recall one or two occasions where Muffy had even raised her voice to them, and those were under extremely stressful conditions.  He denied engaging in loud arguments with Muffy or in ever raising his voice to the kids, except maybe once or twice.  On cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited from Biff that he was not at home at the time of Chase's injury and that as far as he knew, Chase was in the sole care of Muffy at the time.

Testimony of Lotta Money, Muffy's best friend, that she often brought her children to Muffy's house, or Muffy brought hers to Lotta's house, for play groups.  According to Lotta, Muffy was never cross or angry with her children.  In fact, Lotta often complimented Muffy on how much patience she seemed to have for the children.  Lotta never saw Muffy strike, or spank or shake either of the children.  In fact, they had frequently spoken about how neither of them felt that physical discipline was an appropriate form of punishment for children.

Testimony of Dr. Hyly Regarded, a leading nationally recognized neurologist that he has been in medical practice for 46 years, has served as the chief of neurology at the most prestigious hospital in the City of New York for 20 years, that he is on the faculty of Columbia University School of Medicine and has written extensively in scholastic and medical journals on the subject of brain trauma injuries.  Dr. Regarded testified that he reviewed the records of the medical examinations and treatment of Chase as well as the autopsy records.  In his opinion, the manner of Chase's death was entirely consistent with the factual description given by Muffy - that Chase had fallen from the chair. The lack of any skull damage or exterior bruising is explained by his fall onto a carpeted floor.  Even without exterior signs of injury, the extensive brain damage could just as likely have been caused from the fall as from any other source. 

Further, Dr. Regarded testified that he does not subscribe to the recognition of "shaken baby syndrome."  In his opinion, the type of brain damage suffered by those patients previously diagnosed with the syndrome could not have resulted from the shaking mechanism. In his opinion, the shaking of a baby, alone, regardless of the amount of force applied, could not result in the extent of the injury suffered by patients like Chase.  Some external physical force to the skull is required to create such damage.  Dr. Regarded bases his opinion on the past treatment of thousands of brain injury patients and consultation and research in thousands of additional cases.  Although less than 10% of these cases involved infants or toddlers, his experience with those populations is still extensive. 

Dr. Regarded has appeared on at least 10 National Professional Panels at Brain Injury Conferences.  He has always been asked to present his opinion that there should not be a recognized, diagnosable condition known as "shaken baby syndrome" as a counterpoint to the panelists who present the symptoms and methods of diagnosis and treatment for the condition.  On cross-examination, Dr. Regarded admitted that "shaken baby syndrome" is listed as a recognized diagnosis in most medical textbooks that cover the subject area.  He also re-iterated that he never examined Chase, only his medical records including the findings of Dr. Good and Dr. Smart.

THE LAW:

Yours is a grave and serious obligation.  You may find the facts as you are able from the evidence presented before you. But, it is from these instructions that you must take your guidance in applying the law.

A person is guilty of murder when she commits an act with intent to cause death or serious bodily harm to another or with reckless disregard for the likelihood of causing death or serious bodily harm to another and death results to the other.

A person is guilty of manslaughter when she commits an act under such extreme emotional or physical upset or state so as to be unable to form an intent to kill or seriously harm another or to comprehend her act as reckless disregard for the other’s safety, yet resulting in the death of another.

Manslaughter is a lesser-included offense to murder. Although the defendant has been charged with murder, if the jury finds that the conditions necessary to prove murder have not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, but conditions sufficient to prove manslaughter have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, the jury may not convict the defendant of murder, but may convict the defendant of manslaughter.

It is the obligation of the prosecution to prove each and every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.  If you are not convinced, beyond a reasonable doubt, as to the commission or existence of each and every element of the crime charged or its lesser-included offenses, then you must find the defendant not guilty.

Retire now to the jury chambers and seek your verdict.  Only a unanimous decision of your number may be reported as a verdict.  Otherwise, please report to me your inability to come to a verdict and be prepared to explain why you were unable to do so. 

Your first order of business will be to choose a foreperson who will be responsible for reporting any verdicts or asking any questions of the judge.  The foreperson may ask only those questions that the entire jury has certified for inquiry to the judge.

Go now, deliberate, state your verdict and say no more.



APPENDIX B
BLAW 3175 Jury Trial Exercise:

We, the jury in the case of THE PEOPLE vs. MUFFY render the following verdict:

On the charge of MURDER:                        ___________   GUILTY


                                                                   ___________   GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER


                                                                   ___________   NOT GUILTY


___________   After deliberation, we were unable to reach a verdict (show votes in each space above)

(NOTE:  you may check one AND ONLY ONE verdict.   If you are not able to reach a unanimous verdict, be prepared to explain to the class exactly why you have been unable to do so)


Jury Members (print and sign)



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