Optimising the First Year Experience in Law: The Law Peer Tutor Program at the University of New South Wales
UNSW Law Research Paper No. 2007-7
Legal Education Review, Vol. 16, 2006
21 Pages Posted: 22 Jan 2007
Date Written: January 21, 2007
Abstract
One powerful notion that permeates the Law School at the University of New South Wales is that first year law has a significant 'gatekeeper' role. The School recognises the importance of identifying students who are struggling in order to offer appropriate social and academic support. Clearly, the vast majority of students are eminently capable of the conceptual work underlying a law degree. Students struggle for reasons other than intellectual capacity, so since 1997 the Law School has supported the Law Peer Tutors program as a way to address these other issues that can hinder students and lead some of them to drop out in first year.
Evidence suggests that this dropping out results from a feeling of not belonging or a general alienation from the culture of university. It appears that students who identify as part of a community remain and progress. First year is therefore a significant time to ensure that students are encouraged to identify as 'law students' and see themselves as connected to the academic community in general, and particularly to the staff and students in the Law School. The program is jointly funded by the Law School and The Learning Centre and uses a model of peer-to-peer tutoring to ensure students have a successful transition to university. It focuses on offering academic support, but via its small group structure has a social dimension which helps to tackle some of the reasons identified in surveys of students' decisions not to complete first year. Approximately 150 First Year students and 15 Law Peer Tutors are involved in the program each year.
Keywords: Law school, law degree, law students, university, peer tutoring, legal education, student support
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