Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Teaching Criminal Law:

   I'll be teaching criminal law -- the substantive first-year course,
   not constitutional criminal procedure -- for the first time this
   coming year. Naturally, I'm asking colleagues for advice, doing a good
   deal of reading, and trying to come up with good pedagogical ideas
   myself; teaching a new class is exciting but daunting (and
   time-consuming).

   I'd like, though, to also mine your collective experience for tips.
   Could those of you who have taken criminal law (and those who have
   taught it, of course) tell me what worked well in the classes you've
   had? Any particular nonobvious pedagogical tricks that have really
   helped you understand the subject, or made it more exciting? Any good
   ways that teachers have defused tension in class, or cleared up
   confusion? If so, I'd love to see this in the comments.

   Please be selective; I'm not looking just for amusing stories, or
   arguments that the criminal justice system is broken in some ways, or
   for proposals for radically restructuring the criminal law class. (One
   day I might try a radically different approach to teaching the
   subject, but not the first time I teach it.) I'm looking, selfishly,
   for tips that would help me teach the standard first-year criminal
   class more effectively, preferably for nonobvious tips (i.e., more
   than just "be clear" or "don't insult your students"). Also, please
   don't discuss ways of making the teaching of rape law more effective
   -- I will have a separate post on that subject. Many thanks in advance
   for your help.

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