First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources

This paper reports on a case study of a stand-alone legal research skills programme in the Oxford University Law Faculty. The research methodology involved interviews, surveys and observation of students at two points in 2004 and 2006. The study finds that students increasingly use networked compute...

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Main Author: Meredith, S
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
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author Meredith, S
author_facet Meredith, S
author_sort Meredith, S
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description This paper reports on a case study of a stand-alone legal research skills programme in the Oxford University Law Faculty. The research methodology involved interviews, surveys and observation of students at two points in 2004 and 2006. The study finds that students increasingly use networked computers as their primary information source, with most students using legal databases to find cases, statutes and articles on their reading lists. Students’ skills are better developed in citation searching than in subject searching and in using the more complex features of databases. Formative assessment, represented in ‘getting through the reading list’ for weekly tutorials and essays, was the crucial factor in providing opportunities for students to develop citation searching skills. The study also found that students handle different resources differently, being more likely to read law reports on the computer screen than articles, and using electronic law reports as part of a computer-based study strategy. The report describes how students use the internet to search for materials when writing essays, and considers the question of plagiarism. It recommends that students should be given successive opportunities to do research as part of their everyday study to enable them to develop better research skills and practices.
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spelling oxford-uuid:9bdd60bd-5768-4061-9918-ce7aa416df612022-03-27T00:31:59ZFirst Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic ResourcesWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:9bdd60bd-5768-4061-9918-ce7aa416df61Learning facilitationVocational and professional learningInternet and everyday lifee-LearningLawLibrary & information scienceEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2006Meredith, SThis paper reports on a case study of a stand-alone legal research skills programme in the Oxford University Law Faculty. The research methodology involved interviews, surveys and observation of students at two points in 2004 and 2006. The study finds that students increasingly use networked computers as their primary information source, with most students using legal databases to find cases, statutes and articles on their reading lists. Students’ skills are better developed in citation searching than in subject searching and in using the more complex features of databases. Formative assessment, represented in ‘getting through the reading list’ for weekly tutorials and essays, was the crucial factor in providing opportunities for students to develop citation searching skills. The study also found that students handle different resources differently, being more likely to read law reports on the computer screen than articles, and using electronic law reports as part of a computer-based study strategy. The report describes how students use the internet to search for materials when writing essays, and considers the question of plagiarism. It recommends that students should be given successive opportunities to do research as part of their everyday study to enable them to develop better research skills and practices.
spellingShingle Learning facilitation
Vocational and professional learning
Internet and everyday life
e-Learning
Law
Library & information science
Meredith, S
First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title_full First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title_fullStr First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title_full_unstemmed First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title_short First Year Law Students, Legal Research Skills and Electronic Resources
title_sort first year law students legal research skills and electronic resources
topic Learning facilitation
Vocational and professional learning
Internet and everyday life
e-Learning
Law
Library & information science
work_keys_str_mv AT merediths firstyearlawstudentslegalresearchskillsandelectronicresources