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Authentic Fictions: Simulation, Professionalism and Legal Learning

Karen Barton
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow - School of Law

Patricia McKellar
affiliation not provided to SSRN

Paul Maharg
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow - School of Law



Clinical Law Review, Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 143-93, 2007
NYLS Clinical Research Institute Paper No. 07/08-21

Abstract:     
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in education and training as well as entertainment, but has until recently received relatively little attention in higher education. It is becoming increasingly clear that simulations can be used for educational purposes; but one of the key issues affecting such use is the extent to which simulations can be regarded as authentic learning activities. This article explores some of the complex educational and hermeneutic resonances of this phrase. The article then takes as a case study the development, deployment and effects of a simulation upon a professional learning curriculum, the Scottish Diploma in Legal Practice at the Glasgow Graduate School of Law, and the part that authenticity plays in the simulation. The authors also describe the latest iteration of the simulation in the SIMPLE project (SIMulated Professional Learning Environment). A variety of disciplines and a number of sub-areas in law are using the SIMPLE open-source simulation engine in their programs of study, and will be evaluating the results next year. The authors set such simulation activity within a larger technological, educational and ethical context, and argue that when such projects maintain a sense of professional authenticity, it is possible for students to learn effectively and deeply. Finally, the article argues that such projects are essential not only for the future of legal education but for the development of professionalism in most professional disciplines in higher education.

Keywords: authenticity, learning, e-learning, legal learning, simulation, professionalism, immersive education, virtual world

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: January 24, 2008 ; Last revised: January 31, 2008

Suggested Citation

Barton, Karen, McKellar, Patricia and Maharg, Paul, Authentic Fictions: Simulation, Professionalism and Legal Learning. ; NYLS Clinical Research Institute Paper No. 07/08-21. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1086778


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Contact Information

Paul Maharg (Contact Author)
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow - School of Law ( email )
Lord Hope Building
John Anderson Campus 141 St. James' Rd
Glasgow G4 0LT, Scotland G4 0LT
United Kingdom
Karen Barton
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow - School of Law ( email )
Lord Hope Building
141 St James' Road
Glasgow , Scotland G4 0LT
United Kingdom
Patricia McKellar
affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )
No Address Available
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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