CQUniversity
Browse

File(s) not publicly available

What are the benefits of teaching Australian law to non-law students from non-English speaking backgrounds and cultures?

chapter
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Alison Owens, Irene Wex
For students who choose to study law, the attraction to law is a given but for students who study law as incidental to their degree, the intrinsic interest in law is not a given. This challenge is further magnified in the case of students for whom English is a second language and the law is foreign to their previous civic experiences.This paper begins with a brief conceptual discussion of the perceived benefits of studying Australian law as a non-law student from a non-English speaking background and culture.It then reports on the findings of focus-group research conducted with non- law students from non-English speaking backgrounds who are enrolled at the Sydney International Campus of CQUniversity and with the teachers who are involved in teaching these courses.The focus group research components of the paper seek to identify the perceptions of the teachers and students engaged in the incidental study of law and to identify pedagogical approaches and strategies that facilitate teaching and learning in a culturally diverse teaching and learning environment. Student-participants express their opinions about studying law as part of their degree and reflect on the value of the courses in relation to their professional and personal outcomes. The lecturers and tutors will discuss the challenges they have encountered and the strategies adopted to effectively engage these students in legal issues, processes and discourse to identify effective teaching approaches, strategies and materials in the education of international, non-law students.

History

Editor

Frenkel DA; Gerner-Beuerle C

Parent Title

Legal theory, practice and education

Start Page

99

End Page

116

Number of Pages

18

ISBN-13

9789608541153

Publisher

Athens Institute for Education and Research

Place of Publication

Athens, Greece

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Faculty of Arts, Business, Informatics and Education; International Education Research Centre (IERC);

Era Eligible

  • No

Number of Chapters

18