Posted by David Post:
School Supplies:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_16-2009_08_22.shtml#1250885173


   With horror, I'm beginning to realize that classes (at my law school,
   anyway, and at many others as well) are actually starting up again
   this coming week, bringing summer '09 to an end, alas. Time for my
   annual plug for my "[1]Writing Guidelines" -- if you're a beginning
   law student, or a returning law student, or just someone who writes,
   you're encouraged to download a copy and look through it. I've put
   much of what I've learned about writing well over the years in there,
   and, from the reaction of people who've downloaded it in the past, I
   think it's a decent guide to the art. (Not, incidentally, as a
   replacement for Eugene's terrific book on "Academic Legal Writing,"
   but as a supplement, looking at the craft of writing from a somewhat
   different perspective).

   And speaking of classes, I've made the decision this semester to ban
   computers from my classroom(s). It's something I've been thinking
   about for a couple of years, and it's not something I've come to (I
   hope) without giving the matter some serious thought. This is
   particularly so because this semester one of the courses I'm teaching
   (and in which I'll be implementing this new rule) is a course on
   "Cyberspace Law" -- I know it's going to strike some students as
   bizarre that they won't be allowed to have their laptops in a
   Cyberspace Law class, but I'm prepared to defend the decision. Simply
   put, I think they'll learn more without them because they will be
   forced to engage with the material being presented (or at least they
   will have fewer alternatives to engaging with the material being
   presented -- you can lead a horse to water and all that). Several
   years ago, I sat in on a Law and Economics seminar taught by a
   colleague of mine at Temple Law School, Dave Hoffman, in which he
   forbade students from using laptops during class. It was pretty clear
   to me that the quality of student engagement in the class discussion
   benefited immensely from the decision. The computer is a powerful
   distractant -- when the discussion gets messy or difficult (indeed,
   especially when the discussion gets messy or difficult), it's awfully
   tempting for students to check out for a few minutes to check their
   Facebook page, or send out a few emails, or organize their files, or
   do a little Lexis/Westlaw research, or check the baseball scores, or .
   . . and then, 9 times out of 10, they're lost for the whole class. I
   want confused students to tell me they're confused -- to put their
   hands up and say "Excuse me, but what exactly are you talking about?"
   They don't need good excuses not to do that.

References

   1. http://www.temple.edu/lawschool/dpost/guidelines.PDF

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