Translating the Values of Clinical Pedagogy Across Generations
Publication Title
Clinical Law Review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2013
Abstract
Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It challenged the entrenched isolation and aloofness of law school by questioning the very methods by which law is taught. Channeling the Boomers' cultural tenets of dismantling hierarchy, fostering collaboration, and advocating for social change, it shook off legal academia's suit and tie and rolled up its sleeves, bringing the community into the classroom and putting the university to work. These Boomer-era values are reflected in clinical teaching's enduring core principles of non-directive teaching, reflective practice, close and immediate supervision, learning from experience, and a commitment to social justice.
In clinical education's formative years, teachers, students, and pedagogy were sympathetically aligned. All came from the same generational neighborhood and brought similar perspectives on the purposes of education, work, and advocacy to the clinic. Today, generational diversity is the norm. Baby Boomers mentor Generation X colleagues in the teaching of Millennial students. Generational variety brings a multitude of different approaches to clinical pedagogy. There is no longer a presumptive unity between social and pedagogical perspectives. Clinical teachers and students must now mind the generational gap.
Recommended Citation
Alistair E. Newbern & Emily F. Suski, Translating the Values of Clinical Pedagogy Across Generations, 20 Clin. L. Rev. 181 (2013).
Institutional Repository Citation
Alistair E. Newbern & Emily F. Suski,
Translating the Values of Clinical Pedagogy Across Generations,
Faculty Publications By Year
1609
(2013)
https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/faculty_pub/1609
Volume
20
Issue
1
First Page
181
Last Page
214
Comments
External Links
Westlaw